TRON DAO has announced a new integration with digital asset infrastructure provider zerohash, a move aimed at broadening enterprise access to the TRON network in select jurisdictions. Through the arrangement, enterprise and fintech platform clients will be able to access TRX, the native token of TRON, and TRC-20 USDT across zerohash’s platform for use cases including custody, trading, liquidity, and settlement. The integration also adds a smoother fiat-to-crypto onboarding path for financial technology companies, exchanges, and neobanks seeking to work with TRON-based assets within regulated frameworks.
A push deeper into regulated financial infrastructure
According to the announcement, platforms building on zerohash’s regulated infrastructure can extend TRON-based digital asset access to their end users across supported jurisdictions. That includes support for trading, liquidity management, and settlement, while also helping streamline the conversion of fiat into digital assets. In practical terms, the integration is designed to make it easier for institutions to incorporate TRON-based assets into financial products without having to assemble the full stack of compliance, custody, and operational infrastructure on their own.
TRON framed the integration as part of a broader effort to expand enterprise-grade access to its network, strengthen global liquidity, and support wider adoption of digital assets issued and used on TRON. The collaboration is also intended to extend TRON’s reach into environments where regulated controls matter most, especially for fintech companies and financial institutions that require strict compliance procedures and operational safeguards before launching products tied to blockchain infrastructure.
Sam Elfarra, Community Spokesperson at TRON DAO, said the partnership advances TRON’s goal of expanding digital asset access globally. He added that zerohash’s product suite and infrastructure expertise should help institutions connect to the TRON network more efficiently and with greater confidence when building and deploying new products.
TRON highlights scale in payments and stablecoin settlement
To support the case for greater institutional adoption, TRON pointed to the scale of its network activity. Since launching its mainnet in 2018, the blockchain says it has processed more than $25 trillion in cumulative transfer volume. The network currently reports over 373 million user accounts and more than $26 billion in total value locked across its ecosystem.
On a daily basis, TRON says it handles roughly 11 million transactions, facilitates more than $23 billion in daily transfer volume, and serves over 4 million daily active accounts. Those figures are central to TRON’s effort to position itself not only as a retail-facing blockchain ecosystem, but as a large-scale settlement layer capable of supporting real-world financial flows.
The release also noted that, as of March 2026, the TRON blockchain had recorded more than 13 billion total transactions. TRON further emphasized its role in stablecoin infrastructure, stating that it had until recently hosted the largest circulating supply of USDT, with current supply on the network exceeding $86 billion. That scale has helped TRON market itself as a core settlement network for stablecoin transfers and everyday payments.
What zerohash brings to the integration
zerohash is positioned in the announcement as the enabling layer that bridges crypto functionality with regulated financial operations. The company provides infrastructure for crypto, stablecoins, and tokenized assets through APIs and embeddable developer tools. Its stack is designed to support a broad set of use cases, including cross-border payments, commerce, trading, remittance, payroll, tokenization, and both on- and off-ramp services.
From TRON’s perspective, that infrastructure matters because institutional adoption often depends less on the blockchain alone and more on whether firms can access compliant rails for execution, custody, reporting, and settlement. By integrating with a provider that already serves fintech platforms and regulated market participants, TRON is seeking to reduce friction for businesses that want exposure to TRX or TRC-20 USDT without building every compliance and operational layer internally.
zerohash also highlighted its regulatory footprint. The company said it has regulated entities in the European Union, Latin America, Australia, New Zealand, Bermuda, and other jurisdictions. In the United States, Zero Hash LLC is registered with FinCEN as a Money Services Business and operates as a licensed Money Transmitter in 51 U.S. jurisdictions. Zero Hash Trust Company LLC is chartered by the North Carolina Commissioner of Banks as a non-depository trust company.
Enterprise access, but with jurisdictional limits
While the integration expands access, the announcement made clear that availability remains jurisdiction-dependent. zerohash stated that its services and product offerings may not be available in all jurisdictions, explicitly including New York among the places where access may be restricted. It also disclosed that zerohash accounts are not covered by FDIC or SIPC protections, or equivalent protections outside the United States.
The company further noted that providing technical support or enabling access to a particular asset should not be interpreted as an endorsement of that asset, nor as a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any cryptocurrency. It also disclosed that zerohash is not registered with the SEC or FINRA. These disclaimers are typical of infrastructure providers operating in digital asset markets, particularly when serving institutional and platform clients across multiple legal regimes.
Why the deal matters for TRON’s broader strategy
At a strategic level, the integration reflects TRON’s continued effort to deepen institutional connectivity rather than rely solely on organic retail usage. The network has long been associated with high-volume stablecoin transfers, and this move suggests a deliberate push to make that activity easier to access through regulated infrastructure partners. If successful, the arrangement could strengthen TRON’s role in settlement, treasury movement, and embedded crypto services used by fintech applications and global financial platforms.
The emphasis on custody, trading, liquidity, and settlement also shows that TRON is targeting business-critical workflows rather than promotional partnerships. For institutions, access to a network becomes significantly more useful when it is paired with onboarding rails, compliance tools, and operational controls. That is the gap zerohash is positioned to fill.
More broadly, the announcement reinforces TRON’s message that blockchain infrastructure is increasingly moving into real-world financial environments where compliance and scalability are not optional. By working with a provider that already serves regulated enterprise clients, TRON appears to be betting that the next phase of adoption will depend on how well public blockchain networks connect to institutional-grade systems.
For now, the integration gives eligible clients in supported jurisdictions a new route to access TRX and TRC-20 USDT through established infrastructure. For TRON, it is another step in presenting the network as a global settlement layer for stablecoins and digital assets. For the wider market, it is a reminder that the competition among blockchain ecosystems increasingly centers on regulated access, operational reliability, and enterprise usability as much as on raw on-chain activity.

