Kraken has removed a regulatory hurdle that crypto companies have sought for years: direct access to the Federal Reserve’s core payments infrastructure.
On March 4, the exchange said that Wyoming-chartered bank Kraken Financial has been granted a master account from the Federal Reserve, allowing U.S. dollar payments to be settled directly on Fed rails instead of routing transfers through sponsor banks.
The US Fed confirmed that the crypto company’s bank had received approval as a Tier 3 entity with a limited purpose account authorized for an initial term of one year.
This approval gives the digital asset industry a practical example of what more direct access to the U.S. payments system could look like.
It also comes at a time when the Fed is trying to define a more limited form of central bank access, one that could give certain institutions the ability to connect to key settlement services without expanding the full suite of benefits traditionally associated with Fed accounts.
Kansas City Fed President Jeff Schmid said:
“As we know, the payments landscape is actively evolving. Throughout this transformation, the integrity and stability of the U.S. payments system remains our priority.”
Therefore, the decision is more important than one crypto company.
Kraken’s story appears to be an early field test of a payments-focused model that policymakers in Washington have been debating, one designed to separate access to settlements from the broader public backstop associated with the banking system.
A pilot within a broader policy change
For decades, Fed master accounts have been the gateway to settlement in central bank money; they are final, irreversible and highly valued by major financial institutions.
That status has made them one of the most consequential forms of financial access in the American system.
In recent years, however, new types of charters, such as Wyoming’s Special Purpose Depository Institutions (SPDIs), and other fintech-like banking models have forced regulators to have a tougher conversation.
Should non-traditional institutions be able to establish themselves directly with the Fed? If so, how far should that access extend?
The Fed’s response moves toward a narrower window rather than a wide opening.
In December 2025, the central bank formally solicited public comment on a prototype “Payment Account,” a concept distinct from a full master account and designed to provide access to only a subset of payment services.
Under that proposal, the Fed would offer a very limited package, with no interest paid on the balances. There would be no access to the discount window, no intraday credit and built-in controls to prevent overdrafts.
The prototype would also impose an overnight balance limit, the lower of $500 million and 10% of total assets. Services would be limited to certain settlement rails, including Fedwire Funds and FedNow, while others, such as FedACH, would be excluded.
That design reflects a broader regulatory goal. It appears the Fed is trying to preserve the efficiency benefits of direct access to settlements while limiting the ways in which non-traditional institutions can tap into the central bank’s safety net.
In public comments, Fed Governor Christopher Waller has said that streamlined checking accounts should be up and running by the end of 2026, underscoring that the central bank is considering how to modernize access without expanding risks in ways that resemble shadow banking.
Kraken’s approval fits neatly into that policy background. Even if the account is formally classified as a master account, its one-year, limited-purpose structure makes it look more like a controlled policy experiment than a full embrace of open access.
Why crypto companies care about direct settlement
For most crypto companies, dollar payments still rely on a small number of partner banks willing to provide access to the broader financial system.
This arrangement creates a structural weakness. When sponsor banks change their risk appetite, face regulatory pressure, or decide to reduce exposure to crypto clients, exchanges and stablecoin companies could lose important payment channels even if customer demand remains strong.
This has happened repeatedly in the sector, especially during periods of regulatory scrutiny or banking stress. The result has been a system in which many crypto companies remain dependent on intermediaries for the fundamental movement of the dollar.
A direct settlement could reduce that dependence.
For Kraken, access to Fed rails could improve the speed, resilience and predictability of dollar payments.
It could reduce operational friction in routing transfers through partner banks, and it could give the company more control over a part of the user experience that has often been vulnerable to external disruptions.
Arjun Sethi, co-CEO of Payward and Kraken, said:
“This architecture could enable atomic settlement between fiat and crypto, cash management at an institutional level integrated with digital asset custody, and programmable financial products built within a fully regulated framework. This is what it looks like when crypto infrastructure evolves into a core financial infrastructure.”
For the wider industry, the development introduces a potential new divide.
Companies that can meet bank-like standards of regulation, governance and supervision may be able to internalize a larger share of their payments package.
Others who cannot, however, will likely remain dependent on sponsor banks and exposed to the same bottlenecks that have shaped entry into crypto banks in the United States.
Meanwhile, Kraken’s path also shows how regulation itself can become a competitive advantage.
The company sought entry through a Wyoming SPDI, a charter type described by the state as fully reserved and not allowed to lend out customer fiat deposits as traditional fractional reserve banks do.
That structure could make it easier for regulators to assess the model because it reduces some of the classic maturity mismatch and bank-run risks associated with conventional banking.
At the same time, it raises the threshold for the rest of the sector. It is unlikely that many crypto companies will pursue bank-style charters. And even among those who do, there is no guarantee that direct Fed access will follow.
The likely paths from here
The Fed has said the prototype checking account does not change regulatory eligibility requirements.
That means the most expansive scenario, in which mainstream fintech companies suddenly gain direct access to the central bank, remains unlikely.
A narrower outcome is therefore more plausible.
One possibility is that Kraken remains an exception. In that scenario, the Fed treats the arrangement as a contained test case, uses it to assess controls and operational risks, and then proceeds cautiously or delays additional approvals due to supervisory or political concerns.
A second option is the development of a small cluster of institutions with comparable access. That group could include crypto custodians, trust banks or specifically targeted payment institutions with bank-like governance and legal suitability.
Under that model, the bottleneck between sponsor and bank would decrease, but only for companies willing and able to operate within a highly regulated structure.
A third possibility is broader standardization after 2026 when the Fed formally launches checking accounts according to the timeline Waller outlined.
If that happens, a payments-only access layer could become a more sustainable option for eligible institutions seeking connectivity to services like Fedwire or FedNow.
Even then, access would likely be limited to companies that meet strict regulatory and compliance standards.
What the industry needs to look at
The next phase of this development is likely to be less about the approval process and more about how the scheme functions in practice.
For Kraken, the first question is whether the approval will be extended for one year for a limited purpose. The second is whether the bill’s scope ultimately aligns more clearly with the Fed’s emerging payments-only framework, or expands beyond it.
The key question for the industry is whether the model can be replicated.
If other special-purpose or limited-authority institutions are given similar access, it could indicate that the Fed is willing to move beyond a single-company issue and develop a more systematic approach.
That’s what makes Kraken’s endorsement important.
It’s not just a business milestone for a crypto exchange seeking closer access to the center of the dollar system. It is also a policy experiment with implications for the future design of U.S. payment access.
If the arrangement works operationally and satisfies regulators, it could strengthen the case for allowing a limited class of regulated, payments-oriented institutions to settle more directly on the Fed rails.
If not, it could strengthen the argument that central bank access should remain closely linked to traditional banking.
Either way, the issue that crypto companies have been debating for years is no longer abstract. It is now being tested within the machinery of the US payment system.

