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Yesterday β€” 17 December 2025Main stream

BitGo Enables Lightning Network Payments Directly from Custody

17 December 2025 at 14:06

Bitcoin Magazine

BitGo Enables Lightning Network Payments Directly from Custody

BitGo, a digital asset infrastructure company, announced it now offers Bitcoin Lightning Network access directly from its qualified custody platform. The move makes it one of the first companies to provide Lightning payments for institutional custody.

The service aims to give clients faster and cheaper Bitcoin transactions while keeping institutional security standards intact. It builds on BitGo’s earlier self-custody Lightning solution.

The new offering is powered through a partnership with Voltage, a Lightning Network infrastructure provider. Clients can now use Lightning without running their own nodes or managing keys. BitGo and Voltage handle infrastructure, channels, liquidity, and key management.

Through simple APIs, clients can create wallets, send payments, generate invoices, and track transactions. The platform integrates fully with BitGo’s existing wallet infrastructure, policies, and permissions.

Enterprises adopting Lightning usually face challenges like maintaining nodes, channels, liquidity, and keys. BitGo removes these hurdles. Institutions can now access Lightning with minimal setup and zero operational overhead.

BitGo, along with Ripple, Circle, Fidelity Digital Assets, and Paxos, received conditional approval from the OCC to become federally chartered national trust banks.

This shift from state to federal oversight allows them to offer nationwide fiduciary and digital asset custody services, enhancing regulatory clarity, institutional confidence, and the mainstream adoption of cryptocurrencies.

Lightning Network hits an all-time high

This move comes as Bitcoin’s Lightning Network hits a new all-time high of 5,637β€―BTC in capacity, driven largely by institutional inflows even as broader user adoption and node growth lag.Β 

Data from AMBOSS shows the surge, concentrated in November and December, surpasses the previous peak from March 2023, signaling renewed confidence among major exchanges like Binance and OKX, which have added significant BTC to Lightning channels.

Β Despite rising capacity, the network’s number of nodes and channels remains below historical highs, highlighting a gap between capitalization and widespread use.Β 

The increase coincides with ecosystem developments, including Tether’s $8 million investment in Lightning-focused startup Speed and Lightning Labs’ release of Taproot Assets v0.7, enabling reusable addresses, auditable asset supplies, and larger, more reliable transactions.Β 

These upgrades position the Lightning Network as more than a micropayment system, offering potential for higher-value transfers that leverage Bitcoin’s security, speed, and low fees while expanding real-world financial applications on the network.

β€œBy offering institutional access to Lightning directly from custody, we are allowing our clients to focus on innovation instead of infrastructure,” said Mike Belshe, BitGo CEO and co-founder. β€œWe are combining the speed and lower transaction costs of Lightning with the trusted security of BitGo to make bitcoin practical for everyday payments.”

This post BitGo Enables Lightning Network Payments Directly from Custody first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Bitcoin’s Lightning Network Capacity Hits New-All Time High

17 December 2025 at 12:54

Bitcoin Magazine

Bitcoin’s Lightning Network Capacity Hits New-All Time High

Bitcoin’s Lightning Network, the layer-2 payments system designed to make Bitcoin faster and cheaper to use, has reached a new all-time high in capacity, signaling renewed institutional interest even as grassroots adoption lags.

Data from AMBOSS shows Lightning capacity climbed to 5,637 BTC yesterday, surpassing its previous peak in March 2023.Β 

The surge, concentrated in November and December, follows a year of declining capacity, as more Bitcoin is added to existing channels, enabling off-chain payments that settle nearly instantly and at minimal fees.

Yet, the network’s growth in BTC held has not been mirrored by an increase in users or nodes. Lightning currently has around 14,940 nodes, per Bitcoin Visuals, down from a peak of 20,700 in early 2022, and 48,678 channels, also below historical highs. This gap highlights a network that is becoming more capitalized but not necessarily more widely used.

Institutional Bitcoin Lightning Surge

β€œIt’s not just one company that’s putting more Bitcoin into the Lightning Network; it’s across the board,” said Amboss, pointing to major exchanges such as Binance and OKX, which have deposited significant BTC into Lightning channels in recent weeks.Β 

This institutional influx contrasts with the slower adoption among smaller operators and individual users.

The surge coincides with broader ecosystem developments. Yesterday, stablecoin issuer Tether announced it had led an $8 million investment round in Lightning-focused startup Speed, which facilitates stablecoin payments over Bitcoin’s Lightning Network.Β 

Meanwhile, Lightning Labs rolled out version 0.7 of Taproot Assets, a multi-asset Lightning protocol. The upgrade introduces reusable addresses, auditable asset supplies, and support for larger, more reliable transactions.Β 

Taproot Assets enables stablecoins to leverage Bitcoin’s security while benefiting from Lightning’s speed and low fees, offering a potential alternative to Ethereum-based stablecoin networks.

All this movement could expand Lightning beyond micropayments, positioning it as a viable infrastructure for higher-value transfers. Lightning Labs called the release a foundation for β€œtrillions of dollars to flow on Bitcoin and Lightning,” reflecting ambitions to merge Bitcoin’s security with real-world payments and financial applications.

The Lightning Network is fundamentally a system for updating and enforcing off-chain agreements on BTC balances between users, using pre-signed transactions and mechanisms to ensure the most recent state can be securely settled on-chain.Β 

While the current implementation relies on specific channel designs, HTLCs, and routing protocols, these components are modular and can evolve or be replaced over time without changing the core principle of secure, instant, off-chain BTC payments.

This post Bitcoin’s Lightning Network Capacity Hits New-All Time High first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

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