Deloitte and Touche LLP have completed a SOC 2 Type 2 examination for Chainlink’s CCIP and data feeds, making Chainlink the only data and interoperability oracle platform in the blockchain industry to simultaneously hold SOC 2 Type 2, SOC 2 Type 1, and ISO/IEC 27001:2022 certifications, the full suite of security credentials that institutional risk teams require before deploying.
Chainlink announced on The research was conducted in accordance with the attestation standards of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, the same regulatory standard used in the traditional financial services industry.
Chainlink SOC 2 Type 2 Deloitte Certification completes the entire institutional security stack
SOC 2 Type 2 differs from Type 1 in a critical way: while Type 1 evaluates whether security controls are properly designed, Type 2 evaluates whether these controls actually work effectively over an extended period of time. For institutional risk teams, legal departments and compliance officers at banks and asset managers, that operational verification is all they need before approving the use of a technology provider. Chainlink previously achieved SOC 2 Type 1 attestation and ISO/IEC 27001:2022 certification, establishing a compliance benchmark that no other Oracle platform had achieved. The Type 2 result now bridges the final gap between Chainlink’s compliance posture and the demands of the most conservative institutional buyers in the traditional financial sector. As crypto.news reported, CCIP has averaged approximately $90 million in weekly token transfers and Chainlink’s oracle infrastructure has enabled more than $28 trillion in cumulative transaction value, delivering a production track record that now formally validates the Type 2 certification through an independent third party.
What the certification opens up for institutional implementation
SOC 2 Type 2 certification from a Big-4 accounting firm is not a technical upgrade, it is an unlocking of purchasing. Major financial institutions, including banks, asset managers, pension funds and insurance companies, operate under vendor due diligence frameworks that require external attestation of security controls before third-party technology can be approved for production use. An internal security claim of a blockchain protocol has no weight in that process. A certificate from Deloitte does. As crypto.news documented, the tokenized real-world asset sector reached $27 billion by 2026, positioning Chainlink as the primary oracle infrastructure for the growing pipeline of institutions tokenizing stocks, funds, and bonds on-chain. The outcome of SOC 2 Type 2 strengthens that position by removing the final compliance objection that regulated institutions often raise against blockchain technology providers. Institutions already using Chainlink, including Swift, Euroclear, JPMorgan, UBS and Fidelity International, operate under the very compliance frameworks that the Type 2 attestation addresses.
$LINK The price has not reflected fundamental progress
Despite the certification and the broader institutional adoption story, $LINK will remain under price pressure in 2026. As crypto.news has been tracking, Chainlink signed an exclusive CCIP partnership with SBI Digital Markets in late 2025, positioning itself as the cross-chain infrastructure for SBI’s entire digital asset hub for issuance, settlement and secondary trading. The SBI deal, the Deloitte certification and the rollout of live equity data streams all point in the same structural direction: Chainlink is becoming embedded in the regulated financial infrastructure at a pace that most market participants are not currently pricing in. $LINK. The token traded at around $9.17 on April 23, about 50% below its late 2025 high, in a market environment where broader macro pressures from the conflict with Iran have suppressed risk appetite for digital assets.
Chainlink’s next major institutional milestone is the expansion of its Data Streams product to cover global equity market hours, with the tokenized RWA sector expected to well exceed $27 billion in total value as more financial institutions move from pilot to production deployment.
