Chainlink’s Q3 2025 felt less like a quarterly update and more like a coming-of-age moment. Over the last three months, the project moved well beyond the narrow role many still imagine, a simple price oracle for DeFi, and began staking a clearer claim as the plumbing for real-world, institutional tokenized finance.
A few highlights underline that shift. Chainlink published an updated platform vision, rolled out DataLink (an institutional data-publishing service), and introduced the Digital Transfer Agent (DTA) technical standard so transfer agents and fund administrators can move services onchain while staying compliant.
It also partnered with the U.S. Department of Commerce to bring Bureau of Economic Analysis macro data, think GDP and the PCE Price Index, onto blockchains, and showed up at Sibos with a big presence alongside major banks and market infrastructures.
Commercial Traction was Unmistakable
Chainlink’s corporate actions initiative expanded to include 24 major market participants, a group that reads like a who’s who of finance, from Swift and DTCC to UBS and Euroclear, and Phase 2 delivered concrete improvements in speed, reach and the usability of structured corporate actions data.
A pilot with UBS demonstrated how ISO 20022 messages could trigger real subscriptions and redemptions in a tokenized fund smart contract, which is the sort of real-world bridging that institutional users have been asking for.
The DTA standard already has early adopters: UBS uMINT is among the first smart contracts moving toward the standard, and Deutsche Börse Market Data + Services began publishing market data onchain via DataLink. Those are meaningful steps.
One brings traditional back-office workflows onchain with minimal disruption, and the other makes billions of real-time data points available to onchain apps without forcing institutions to rebuild infrastructure.
Security and enterprise readiness weren’t afterthoughts. Chainlink earned ISO 27001 certification and a SOC 2 Type 1 attestation covering Price Feeds, SmartData (Proof of Reserve and NAV) and CCIP, with Deloitte & Touche LLP performing the assessments. That kind of third-party validation matters when you’re pitching banks, exchanges and regulators.
On interoperability, CCIP continued to expand. It landed on Aptos (the first MoveVM chain for CCIP) and is live on more than 65 networks. Cross-chain tokens (CCTs) kept gaining traction too, including notable deployments for large issuers and growing cross-chain volumes for assets like SolvBTC and syrupUSDC.
Numbers Tell a Similar Story of Momentum
Chainlink surpassed $100 billion in total value secured (TVS) and has roughly 70% market share among oracles, while the Chainlink Reserve grew to 523,159 LINK collected from onchain and offchain revenue.
The SVR mechanism recaptured over $1.6 million in non-toxic liquidation MEV on Aave in Q3, a big step up from Q2, and SVR’s total recapture now stands at $1.77 million. Practical use cases rounded out the quarter.
21X, an EU-regulated onchain exchange, went live with Chainlink on Polygon. Moreover, Misyon Bank used Chainlink services to power a Turkish lira-backed token and onchain reserve verification.
Similarly, Saudi Awwal Bank announced plans to leverage Chainlink tools, and Zand Bank in the UAE opened strategic discussions. There was even a win at the Swift Hackathon, where Chainlink’s solution was chosen from 104 entrants for enabling fast, privacy-aware cross-border settlement.
If there’s a headline coming out of Q3, it’s that Chainlink is packaging a set of standards, services and integrations that actually let traditional financial institutions test and roll out tokenized workflows without ripping out their existing systems.
That’s a practical, incremental approach: pilots, standards, certifications and partnerships, not hype. All of this leads to SmartCon 2025 in New York City on November 4–5, where Chainlink plans to share further updates and demos.
For anyone following the tokenization of finance, Q3 felt like the point where the conversation shifted from theoretical possibility to tangible infrastructure, and the next few months will tell whether that momentum keeps building.