Settlement finality is the irrevocable and unconditional transfer of an asset from sender to receiver. In JIL, finality is achieved when 14 of 20 validators confirm a transaction through BFT consensus. The resulting finality receipt is cryptographic proof that the transfer is complete and cannot be reversed by any party.
The lack of true finality is a hidden risk in most blockchain systems. Bitcoin requires 6 confirmations (approximately 60 minutes) for reasonable finality. Ethereum's finality is approximately 12 minutes. During these waiting periods, transactions can theoretically be reversed through chain reorganizations.
JIL provides true deterministic finality - not probabilistic. Once 14 validators confirm a transaction, it is mathematically impossible to reverse without controlling more than 6 validators. The finality receipt is generated in under 2 seconds and serves as legal-grade proof of completion.
JIL provides settlement finality through its purpose-built L1 blockchain with sub-2-second deterministic finality, validator consensus, and cryptographic evidence generation.
Settlement Finality is critical for institutional operations because it reduces risk, improves capital efficiency, and provides verifiable proof of settlement completion.