- Kraken secured the first Federal Reserve master account for a crypto firm
- The account allows settlement directly in central bank money
- A new “skinny” master account model may open the door for other crypto companies
After more than five years of waiting and regulatory battles, Kraken has achieved something no crypto-native firm had managed before. Through its Wyoming-regulated banking arm, Kraken Financial, the exchange secured a Federal Reserve master account. That approval effectively plugs the company directly into the Fed’s payment infrastructure.

In practical terms, this means Kraken can hold reserves and settle transactions in central bank money. Until now, crypto firms had to rely on intermediary banks to access the financial system’s core settlement rails. Removing those middle layers changes how efficiently funds can move between crypto markets and traditional finance.
The “Skinny” Master Account Model
Kraken’s access comes with clear limitations. The Federal Reserve’s proposed “skinny” master account structure prevents the firm from lending, accessing Fed liquidity facilities, or operating like a traditional commercial bank. The account is designed strictly for payments and settlement.
That restriction is not necessarily a weakness. In fact, it appears to be the compromise that made the approval possible. The framework allows crypto companies to integrate with core financial infrastructure without granting them the full privileges of regulated banking institutions.
A Door Opens for the Crypto Industry
The larger significance lies in the precedent. For years, companies such as Custodia Bank and Anchorage have pushed for similar access to Federal Reserve accounts. Kraken’s approval suggests the regulatory environment may be shifting from outright exclusion to cautious integration.

If the “skinny” account model becomes accepted policy, other crypto firms could pursue similar arrangements. That would gradually weave crypto infrastructure into the existing financial system rather than forcing it to operate entirely outside traditional payment rails.
Integration Instead of Isolation
For much of the past decade, crypto companies have faced persistent banking challenges. Account closures, payment disruptions, and regulatory friction often forced firms to rely on fragile relationships with intermediary institutions. Direct access to the Fed’s system changes that dynamic.
Kraken’s master account is limited, but the symbolism carries weight. A crypto-native company now has a direct link to the Federal Reserve’s settlement network. That marks a subtle but important shift. Instead of trying to isolate the industry, parts of the financial system are beginning—slowly—to integrate it.











