Roadmap · settlement & interoperability

Designed to connect institutions across chains — and settle near-instantly

Institutions operate in silos. The AKRU Network is a permissioned layer designed to connect them — cross-chain transactions, on-chain identity, and near-instant T+0 settlement on private subnet infrastructure — so value will move between institutions with the efficiency, compliance, and control they require.

On the AKRU roadmap — in active development, not yet generally available.

Permissioned & identity-gated RoadmapPrivate subnet infrastructure RoadmapNear-instant T+0 settlement RoadmapCross-chain RoadmapBuilt on Avalanche Roadmap
What it's designed to do

Interoperability without the silos

Cross-chain transactions Roadmap

Designed to move value and records across chains, connecting institutions that today sit on separate, isolated systems.

Private subnet infrastructure Roadmap

A permissioned, node-based subnet purpose-built for institutional privacy and security — not a public network.

Near-instant T+0 settlement Roadmap

Will settle transactions in near-real time, compressing settlement cycles from days to moments.

On-chain identity Roadmap

Every counterparty will be identity-verified before a transaction executes — KYC/KYB enforced at the network layer.

Smart-contract automation Roadmap

Programmatic transfers and settlement logic designed to replace manual, error-prone back-office steps.

Scalable by design Roadmap

Infrastructure designed to grow with institutional volume while holding privacy and performance.

See how it fits the platform

Sparse constellation of navy nodes connected by hairline light paths
Questions institutions ask

Frequently asked questions

Is the AKRU Network available today?

No — the Network is a roadmap product in active development, not yet generally available. The AKRU platform, transfer-agent services, and document intelligence are live today; the Network is the interoperability layer being built on top of them.

Will the Network be a public blockchain network?

No. It is designed as a permissioned, private subnet — every participant identity-verified, every node known — built for institutional privacy and control rather than open participation.

How can our institution get involved before launch?

Talk to us about the roadmap. We are engaging institutions now on settlement use cases and design priorities, and early conversations shape what ships first.

Where institutional settlement is headed

A 15-minute conversation on the Network roadmap and your settlement use case.