The Kraken Fed master account has arrived, and with it, a genuinely historic shift in how crypto connects to the U.S. banking system. On March 4, 2026, the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City granted Kraken Financial direct access to the Fed payment rails — the same infrastructure that thousands of banks and credit unions use every single day.
Kraken Financial, a Wyoming-chartered SPDI crypto bank, can now settle dollar transactions directly on Fedwire, cutting out the intermediary correspondent banks it previously relied on. Right now, that makes Kraken the first-ever digital asset firm to operate this deep inside the U.S. crypto banking system, and also the clearest signal yet that digital asset integration into regulated finance is no longer just a talking point.
Kraken Fed Master Account Unlocks Crypto Banking And Digital Asset Access

What the Approval Actually Covers
The Kraken Fed master account comes with a one-year initial term and some real limits. Kraken will not earn interest on reserves, and it also will not have access to the Fed’s emergency lending window — at least not right now. Under the Fed’s 2022 tiered framework, Kraken sits in Tier 3, meaning it faces the strictest level of review of any account holder. The approval wrapped up more than five years of regulatory back-and-forth, examination, and close coordination with both U.S. federal and Wyoming state supervisors.
Through its new Kraken Fed master account, Kraken Financial connects directly to Fedwire, which brings down costs and speeds up deposits and withdrawals for large traders and institutional clients — a major friction point for the crypto banking system for years.
Arjun Sethi, Co-CEO of Kraken, stated:
“This milestone marks the convergence of crypto infrastructure and sovereign financial rails. With a Federal Reserve master account, we can operate not as a peripheral participant in the U.S. banking system, but as a directly connected financial institution.”
Wyoming Governor Mark Gordon said:
“This news has been a long time coming, but Wyoming welcomes it nonetheless. This approval of a master account for Kraken by the Federal Reserve signals support for Wyoming’s banking and digital asset laws.”
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Political Support — and Sharp Pushback From Banks
Senator Cynthia Lummis (R-WY), chair of the Senate Banking Subcommittee on Digital Assets, has pushed for this kind of digital asset integration for years and celebrated the Kraken Fed master account decision loudly.
Senator Lummis stated:
“This approval is a watershed moment for the digital asset industry. The Federal Reserve has acknowledged what I’ve always said was the case — that a digital asset company can balance innovation with strong risk management. Though approval took five and a half years, the Fed’s actions — at long last — validate Wyoming’s thoughtful regulatory framework. I look forward to resolution of further pending applications in the coming weeks. I congratulate Kraken, the Kansas City Fed, and the Board of Governors for this monumental step towards making payments safer, faster, and cheaper.”
Traditional banking groups did not share that enthusiasm. The Kraken Fed master account drew sharp criticism — mainly around the fact that it was granted before a formal policy framework for so-called “skinny” accounts was finalized by the Federal Reserve Board.
Paige Pidano Paridon, Co-Head of Regulatory Affairs at the Bank Policy Institute, stated:
“We are deeply concerned that the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City has approved an account request for a ‘limited purpose’ master account — which appears to be a ‘skinny’ account — before the Federal Reserve Board has finalized its policy framework for those accounts. It was issued with no transparency into the process for approval or the risk mitigants that have been imposed to address the very significant risks it raises.”
Brooke Ybarra, Senior Vice President of Innovation and Strategy at the American Bankers Association, had this to say:
“This action puts the cart so far ahead, that the horse will never be able to catch up.”
What This Means Going Forward
At the time of writing, the Kraken Fed master account stands as the only one of its kind held by a digital asset firm. Other crypto companies — including Custodia Bank, also a Wyoming-chartered SPDI crypto bank — have been fighting for similar access for years, with Custodia going as far as suing the Fed over it. The broader push for digital asset integration into regulated finance has picked up real speed under the Trump administration, which installed pro-crypto regulators and also moved the Genius Act forward. The Fed payment rails, for so long a closed door to crypto, now have at least one firm on the other side — and that also opens the conversation about who might follow next.