Toyota Blockchain Lab is set to leverage Avalanche’s multi-L1 blockchain to roll out a prototype of its global Mobility Orchestration Network (MON).
In a newly published technical whitepaper, prepared with guidance from Ava Labs, the lab detailed how MON aims to address a major challenge in mobility: fragmented ecosystems where stakeholders operate in isolation. MON is envisioned as a trust-based infrastructure layer that securely connects a wide range of participants across global transportation networks.
By utilizing blockchain to verify and coordinate transactions, MON could provide transparent management of critical mobility functions, including vehicle financing, ownership transfers, insurance claims, ride-sharing agreements, EV charging payments, and carbon credit tracking.
Why Toyota Blockchain Lab chose Avalanche
Toyota selected Avalanche as the foundation for its prototype due to its sub-second transaction finality, high scalability, and strong interoperability. Unlike other EVM-compatible blockchains that operate on a single layer-1 network, Avalanche enables the creation of multiple custom L1s that are both interoperable and independent. This setup allows companies like Toyota to deploy dedicated blockchains tailored to specific regulatory or business needs while still leveraging the wider Avalanche ecosystem.
As the Ava Labs team noted, “Every other chain is one lane. Avalanche is the highway.”
Avalanche currently supports tokenized money market funds, private credit, equities, and over $6 billion in on-chain loans. With Toyota’s MON, the platform is now entering the mobility sector, targeting the next generation of vehicle financing and related services.

