Quick summary: On 22 November 2025 the global payments network SWIFT will end support for the legacy MT message format for many cross-border payments, requiring the newer ISO 20022 standard instead. For everyday bank customers this change happens behind the scenes. For companies, banks and crypto-players it sets up a new stage of payments infrastructure.
Until now many international transfers used older message formats (called MT), which work but provide limited information and can slow things down. The ISO 20022 standard brings richer, better-structured data for each transaction — more fields, clearer information, better tracking. SWIFT explains.
From 22 November 2025 the “co-existence” period ends. Banks sending or receiving many cross-border payments will need to operate in ISO 20022 format. SWIFT’s FAQ states the cut-off date.
For you and me as bank customers the change might not feel dramatic — you still send a transfer and it arrives. But here’s what’s really going on behind the scenes:
Important point: the ISO 20022 standard is about messaging across the financial system, not about a specific cryptocurrency being “approved”. So for example, XRP is not magically “ISO 20022-compliant” in the way regulation might use that term.
But here’s where the crypto world connects: analysts note that Ripple (and its network RippleNet) is better placed when banks and payments systems speak the same language. That means:
If you’re an investor, payment executive or crypto enthusiast, here are some things worth watching:
In short: 22 November 2025 is a milestone in global payments. For everyday users it might pass quietly. For banks, fintechs and crypto players it sets the stage for the next decade of cross-border payments — more automated, data-rich and integrated. Stay ready, stay curious.
This article was originally published as November 22 2025: What the ISO 20022 Switch Means for Banks, Payments and Crypto on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.


