Kraken Financial, the Wyoming-chartered banking arm of the crypto exchange Kraken, has become the first crypto-native or digital asset firm to receive a Federal Reserve master account.
This grants it direct access to the Fed’s core payment systems, such as Fedwire; for real-time gross settlement and related rails, without relying on intermediary commercial banks. The approval came from the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, which oversaw Kraken’s long-pending application; filed back in 2020 after Kraken obtained its special purpose depository institution (SPDI) charter in Wyoming.
It’s described as a limited-purpose or “skinny” master account allowing direct settlement in central bank money, faster and more efficient fiat transfers, reduced costs, and lower operational risks—especially for institutional and professional clients. This does not include full traditional banking privileges like access to the Fed’s discount window (lending facilities).
Register for Tekedia Mini-MBA edition 19 (Feb 9 – May 2, 2026).
Register for Tekedia AI in Business Masterclass.
Join Tekedia Capital Syndicate and co-invest in great global startups.
Register for Tekedia AI Lab.
Kraken positions this as a milestone where crypto infrastructure integrates with core U.S. financial rails, maturing from peripheral to central. Crypto firms have historically depended on partner banks for fiat movements, which added friction, delays, costs, and counterparty risks.
Direct Fed access levels the playing field, enabling Kraken to settle like traditional banks and credit unions. This could accelerate institutional adoption, streamline deposits and withdrawals, and signal a regulatory shift toward greater crypto integration.
Kraken’s own blog post highlights it as “the first digital asset bank in U.S. history” with this access. This could pave the way for others; Custodia Bank, which has pursued similar access and litigation to follow, especially under evolving Fed frameworks for non-traditional institutions. A big step for bridging crypto and traditional finance.
Custodia Bank’s pursuit of a Federal Reserve master account has been a high-profile, years-long effort that contrasts sharply with Kraken’s recent success. Custodia Bank, a Wyoming-chartered special purpose depository institution (SPDI) founded by Caitlin Long, applied for a master account with the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City around 2020—similar timing to Kraken’s application.
The goal was direct access to Fed payment systems for faster, lower-risk fiat settlements, especially for its crypto-focused services. Custodia sued the Fed over delays in processing the application. The Fed formally denied the master account and membership applications, citing risks from Custodia’s heavy reliance on volatile crypto markets, insufficient risk controls limited traditional banking experience, and potential systemic risks.
2024: A U.S. District Court in Wyoming largely upheld the Fed’s denial, ruling that the Fed has discretion and is not required to grant access even to eligible state-chartered institutions.
October 31, 2025: The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit affirmed the district court’s ruling in a 2-1 decision. The court confirmed the Fed’s authority to deny master accounts based on risk considerations, rejecting Custodia’s claim to automatic entitlement under statutes like the Federal Reserve Act.
December 2025: Custodia filed a petition for rehearing en banc (full court review) with the Tenth Circuit, asking all judges to revisit the panel’s decision upholding the Fed’s discretion.
No public resolution on the en banc petition or further appeals is reported in recent coverage. Custodia remains without a master account, and the Fed has not approved one for any fully crypto-native institution prior to Kraken’s limited approval. Kraken Financial secured a limited-purpose master account from the same Kansas City Fed in early 2026.
Reports highlight this as a milestone under potentially evolving regulatory views, possibly influenced by pro-crypto shifts or clearer frameworks. Custodia’s denial stemmed from specific concerns about its business model and risk profile. Kraken’s approval appears more restricted (no discount window access, shorter initial term), but it succeeded where Custodia has not.
Some commentary notes Kraken’s breakthrough could create a clearer precedent or path for others, including Custodia, though Custodia’s ongoing legal fight focuses on challenging the Fed’s discretion broadly. This case remains a key test for crypto integration into traditional finance rails.
Custodia continues advocating for fair access, but the courts have so far backed the Fed’s gatekeeping role to protect system stability.



