Why Did Range Raise New Funding?
Stablecoin infrastructure startup Range has raised $8.3 million in an oversubscribed Series A round, bringing the Zug-based company’s total funding to $11 million.
The round was backed by a mix of traditional fintech investors and crypto-native funds. Swiss-based TX Ventures and U.S.-based SixThirty joined the financing alongside Maven 11 Capital and Onigiri Capital. The investor mix points to a wider shift in stablecoin infrastructure: companies operating between crypto and fiat need systems that look less like wallet dashboards and more like finance, treasury, and compliance platforms.
Range provides a unified platform for companies using stablecoins and traditional banking rails. Its clients include Circle, the Solana Foundation, Stellar, Squads, and Jupiter, among others. The company’s core pitch is that stablecoin adoption has moved beyond simple transfers. Firms now need real-time balance visibility, transaction controls, compliance checks, and audit-ready records across banks, custodians, wallets, and exchanges.
The funding will be used to expand Range’s Unify and Protect products, grow its engineering and go-to-market teams, and extend coverage across more integrations and networks. The company said its existing coverage already spans more than 200 integrations.
What Problem Is Range Trying To Solve?
Range’s business is built around two products. Unify acts as a real-time system of record that connects bank accounts, custodians, wallets, and exchanges into one ledger. Protect serves as a pre-execution control layer that screens onchain transactions for sanctions, fraud, compliance risks, and internal policy violations before assets move.
That structure targets a growing operational gap in stablecoin finance. As companies hold assets across multiple custodians, blockchains, banks, and exchanges, finance teams often lack a single source of truth for balances and exposures. That makes treasury management, reconciliation, compliance reporting, and internal controls harder to maintain at scale.
Range said it tracks 99.41% of all stablecoin payments and tens of billions of dollars in monthly payment volumes. The company also said its Unify system protects more than $30 billion in customer assets and integrates with more than 10,000 banks, custodians, and wallets.
“Stablecoins and fiat are converging, and finance teams need one platform to run both safely and at scale,” Range CEO Andres Monteoliva said. “The hard part was never moving stablecoins. It was keeping control of them: knowing every balance in real time, screening transactions before they move, and staying audit-ready across both rails.”
Investor Takeaway
Range’s funding shows that stablecoin infrastructure is moving toward enterprise control systems. The growth area is no longer only issuance or payments volume, but the software layer that helps firms monitor balances, screen transactions, and satisfy audit and compliance needs.
Why Does This Matter For Stablecoin Adoption?
Stablecoins are increasingly being used for payments, treasury movement, settlement, and cross-border transfers. That broader use makes operational control more important. A firm moving stablecoins across several blockchains and custodians must know where funds are held, which transactions are pending, whether counterparties create compliance risk, and whether internal policies are being followed before execution.
For institutional users, those questions can determine whether stablecoins are treated as a scalable payments rail or a risk-heavy crypto tool. Banks, payment firms, asset managers, and large enterprises typically require controls that can be reviewed by auditors, legal teams, and regulators. Without that layer, stablecoin usage can remain limited to smaller treasury experiments or crypto-native activity.
Range’s pre-execution model is especially relevant because many compliance systems check transactions after movement has already occurred. In stablecoin markets, that can be too late. Assets can move across wallets and chains quickly, and a transaction that violates sanctions rules, fraud controls, or internal approval limits may create immediate exposure.
By placing screening before execution, Range is trying to make stablecoin movement look more like controlled corporate finance activity. That framing could help larger firms adopt stablecoins without relying on fragmented dashboards, manual reconciliation, or post-transaction reviews.
What Are The Market Implications?
The Series A round highlights a broader investment theme around stablecoin infrastructure. As issuance grows and regulatory attention increases, the market is likely to reward platforms that solve control, reporting, and compliance problems rather than only those that increase transaction speed or network coverage.
For exchanges and wallet providers, tools such as Range can reduce operational risk and improve visibility across customer assets and internal treasury flows. For stablecoin issuers and foundations, real-time ledger infrastructure can support stronger reporting and make integrations easier to manage across multiple networks.
The involvement of both fintech and crypto-focused investors also reflects where the market is heading. Stablecoins are no longer being developed only for crypto trading. They are being absorbed into payments, treasury, and financial operations, where traditional compliance expectations still apply.
Range’s next challenge is execution. The company must expand integrations, maintain coverage across fast-changing blockchain networks, and prove that its controls can support larger financial institutions. If stablecoin adoption continues to move into mainstream finance, platforms that manage control and compliance across both fiat and onchain rails may become a core part of the market’s operating layer.

