Lattice is preparing to launch Canton’s first neobank, bringing private settlement, self-custody and card-based spending into one consumer-facing product.
Its model is regulatory-native and non-custodial, a combination that reflects Canton’s broader attempt to make blockchain infrastructure useful without abandoning the controls expected in financial markets.
Much of Canton’s public narrative has focused on institutions, validators, tokenized assets and settlement infrastructure. Lattice is taking the same underlying features, including privacy and fast finality, and applying them to a product that is easier for users to understand: moving money, holding assets and spending through a card.
The product is built around three core features: sub-second settlement, transaction privacy and 24/7 availability. In practice, Lattice wants users to move funds quickly, keep financial activity private and interact with Canton-based assets without depending on traditional banking hours or delayed settlement cycles.
Payments offer the clearest sign of where the product is heading. In a recent post, Lattice said it had enabled the first card payment experience on Canton Network, allowing users to off-ramp Canton assets directly to the Lattice Card and spend anywhere Mastercard is accepted. The company said it had been testing the card internally for company purchases over recent weeks.
The significance is not simply that Canton assets can be spent. It is that Lattice is trying to compress several pieces of financial infrastructure into one application: wallet, neobank, rewards layer and card interface. If the model works, Canton users could move between digital assets and real-world payments with fewer steps.
Lattice is also using a waitlist to build early distribution. Users can join ahead of launch, complete reward tasks and unlock benefits as access opens. The company has announced a partnership with Global Settlement Network and Kyle Sonlin, with more integrations expected as launch approaches.
For Canton, Lattice adds a more familiar consumer entry point to an application layer already spanning trading, lending, wallets, analytics and institutional workflows.
Users can join the waitlist through the Lattice website.



