By Aarav Garg
Today
- America
- Compliance
- Digital Banking

FinScan has expanded its payments compliance platform to include screening for digital wallets and stablecoin transactions, reflecting growing regulatory scrutiny of digital assets within global payment systems.
The update to FinScan Payments enables financial institutions and FinTech firms to screen transactions across both traditional payment rails and digital asset channels through a single platform. This includes stablecoin payments, which can now be assessed alongside established rails such as cross-border wires, domestic transfers and real-time payment systems.
The development comes as stablecoins gain traction as a payment mechanism. Industry estimates indicate that transaction volumes could grow significantly over the coming years, prompting regulators to apply similar compliance expectations as those governing traditional payments. In particular, authorities are placing greater emphasis on screening transactions at the point of initiation.
FinScan Payments allows organisations to screen transactions against sanctions lists, politically exposed persons (PEP) databases and other risk indicators across all supported payment types. The platform also extends these capabilities to digital wallet addresses and transaction counterparties, covering multiple global sanctions frameworks, including those maintained by the United States, United Kingdom, Japan and the United Nations.
“Stablecoins are a live and growing payment rail, and regulators expect institutions to treat them that way,” said Deborah Overdeput, Chief Operating Officer at Innovative Systems. “With FinScan Payments, we’re giving compliance teams a single, real-time screening framework across every traditional and digital rail. That means consistent, explainable screening that extends existing AML and sanctions programs seamlessly into digital wallets and stablecoins.”
The system is built on ISO 20022 standards and supports integration across a range of payment infrastructures, including SWIFT, SEPA and real-time networks. According to the company, the platform is designed to handle high transaction volumes with low latency, aligning with the operational requirements of instant payments and digital asset transfers.
The enhancement reflects a broader shift across financial services, as firms look to unify compliance processes amid the convergence of traditional banking systems and blockchain-based payment technologies.
