Kraken Financial has made history by becoming the first digital asset bank in the United States to be granted a Federal Reserve master account, the company announced on Wednesday. The approval gives Kraken Financial direct access to the Federal Reserve’s payment infrastructure, a move the firm says will let it settle on core rails like Fedwire without passing through intermediary correspondent banks, and promises faster, simpler fiat movement for institutional clients.
The decision caps more than five years of regulatory engagement and intensive operational review, according to the company, and represents what its leaders describe as a turning point in the relationship between crypto infrastructure and the traditional banking system. “This milestone marks the convergence of crypto infrastructure and sovereign financial rails,” said Arjun Sethi, Co-CEO of Payward and Kraken, in the firm’s announcement. He added that having a master account allows the bank to operate “not as a peripheral participant in the U.S. banking system, but as a directly connected financial institution.”
Practically, Fed master-account access means Kraken Financial can route payments over Fedwire and other core payment channels without relying on correspondent banks, an advantage the company says will reduce settlement complexity, lower costs and cut operational dependencies. Industry reporting also noted the approval and emphasized the significance of giving a digital-asset focused bank direct connectivity to the central bank’s payments network.
Kraken Financial, which operates as a Wyoming-chartered Special Purpose Depository Institution (SPDI) on a full-reserve model, said the master account will be rolled out in phases. The bank will initially use its new capability to facilitate institutional client activity on Kraken’s exchange, with additional features integrated into Payward’s broader settlement and payments layer over time and in close coordination with regulators. The firm stressed that this is part of a deliberate, supervised expansion of payment capabilities rather than an abrupt change in business model.
The SPDI framework in Wyoming, which requires full reserves equal to or exceeding client fiat deposits, has been central to Kraken Financial’s regulatory narrative since its charter. The company pointed to extensive examination and operational scrutiny during the multi-year approval process, noting that the master-account permission reflects both state supervision and engagement with the Federal Reserve. Federal filings and past communications show Kraken’s application for Federal Reserve access has been under consideration for several years as the Fed updated guidance on which entities may connect to its services.
Beyond the immediate efficiencies, Kraken and its executives framed the approval as an architectural step toward tighter integration between fiat and crypto markets. They suggested that direct Fed connectivity could eventually enable atomic settlement between dollars and digital assets, institutional-grade cash management tied to custody, and programmable financial products built inside a regulated framework.
Regulators and market participants will be watching closely as Kraken Financial begins its phased rollout. For proponents, the move signals maturation: crypto firms are building the back-end plumbing needed to sit alongside legacy finance. For skeptics, it raises questions about oversight, risk management and the implications of non-traditional players having direct access to core payment rails. Kraken says it will continue to work hand-in-glove with the Federal Reserve and Wyoming supervisors as it expands the capabilities of its bank and integrates those services into Payward’s platform.


