Blockchain Will Be Embedded in Most Financial Services by 2030
According to Gartner’s 2025 Technology Forecast, blockchain will be a standard component of financial services infrastructure by 2030, similar to how cloud computing transitioned from optional to mandatory over the past decade. The firm projects that 60% of large financial institutions will use blockchain for at least one core business process by 2028, up from 30% in 2024.
The trajectory toward 3.6 billion digital banking customers requires infrastructure that is faster, cheaper, and more transparent than legacy systems. Blockchain provides all three characteristics, positioning it as essential infrastructure for the next generation of financial services.

Convergence With Traditional Finance
The boundary between blockchain-based and traditional financial services is dissolving. Visa processes stablecoin settlements. BlackRock issues tokenised funds. JPMorgan operates blockchain settlement platforms. These are not blockchain experiments — they are traditional financial services running on blockchain infrastructure. McKinsey projects that by 2030, most consumers will use blockchain-based financial services without knowing it, just as they use internet protocols without awareness of the underlying technology.
Fintech revenue growing at 23% annually includes increasing contributions from companies building the integration layers between blockchain and traditional finance. The winning companies will be those that make blockchain invisible — providing its benefits without requiring users to understand its technology.
Programmable Finance at Scale
Smart contracts will enable financial products that adapt automatically to changing conditions. Insurance policies that adjust premiums based on real-time risk data. Loans that modify interest rates based on borrower behaviour. Investment products that rebalance automatically based on market conditions. These programmable financial products are possible today in DeFi but have not yet reached mainstream adoption.
Accenture estimates that programmable finance will automate 30 to 40% of financial operations by 2030, saving the industry $100 billion annually. Fintech startups are building the smart contract frameworks and developer tools needed to bring programmable finance to regulated financial institutions.
Global Financial Inclusion
Blockchain-driven financial services have the potential to reach 1.4 billion unbanked adults who lack access to traditional banking. Mobile-based blockchain platforms can provide savings, credit, insurance, and payment services without requiring branch infrastructure or formal identity documents. In East Africa, mobile money platforms built on blockchain infrastructure already serve tens of millions of previously unbanked users.
The cost structure of blockchain-based services makes financial inclusion economically viable. The marginal cost of adding a new user to a blockchain platform is near zero. Micro-transactions that would be unprofitable on traditional payment rails — a $0.50 insurance premium, a $2 loan, a $5 international transfer — become viable when processing costs are measured in fractions of a cent.
The Investment Landscape
Fintech venture funding has grown more than 10x in the past decade, and blockchain infrastructure remains one of the most heavily funded categories. The future of blockchain-driven financial services is not speculative — it is being built today by thousands of companies with billions in capital. The financial institutions and fintech companies that position themselves at the intersection of blockchain and traditional finance will define how financial services work for the next generation.






