Transak Is Solving the Hardest Problem in Stablecoin Payments, Here’s How
Stablecoins are hailed as the future of money (digital dollars that move globally at the speed of the internet, without the volatility of traditional cryptocurrencies). But while the concept is elegant, the experience of actually using stablecoins remains far from seamless.
Behind every “simple” stablecoin payment is a tangle of infrastructure: KYC checks, fiat on-ramps, local bank rails, wallet integrations, fraud controls, and regulatory compliance spanning multiple jurisdictions. This middle layer (between the moment someone decides to use stablecoins and the moment funds land in a wallet) is where most users get lost.
This so-called “messy middle” is what Transak, a Miami-headquartered stablecoins payments infrastructure provider, is focused on abstracting away.
Founded in 2019, Transak began as a crypto on-ramp provider. Today, it powers over 450 apps and wallets, and has processed more than $1.5 billion in transaction volume. But over the past year, the company has quietly pivoted toward something more ambitious: becoming the backend infrastructure layer for global stablecoin payments.
The Messy Middle No One Wants to Build
A stablecoin transaction may appear instant on-chain, but the flow that gets users to that point is anything but.
A typical user onboarding journey might involve registering with a centralized exchange, completing KYC, transferring funds, swapping assets, bridging tokens across chains, and finally interacting with the target app or protocol. Typically, this process takes a few hours (assuming nothing goes wrong).
For businesses, the challenges multiply. Integrating payment methods across geographies, obtaining regulatory licenses, handling fraud and AML checks, and offering customer support across multiple time zones.
“Everyone wants stablecoins to work like cash, but no one wants to build the infrastructure to make that possible,” said Sami Start, CEO and co-founder of Transak. “That’s the part we take on.”
From Crypto Infra to Payments Infra
Transak is now the “onboarding infrastructure for financial apps.” The idea is straightforward: Any app, whether fintech or web3, should be able to onboard any user, anywhere, into stablecoins via fiat in one click.
This new focus has shaped the company’s product strategy around modular APIs and embeddable widgets that abstract away compliance, payments, and crypto conversions. Under the hood, Transak offers:
- Authentication modules to tie users to verified identities.
- KYC and AML flows using both first-party and partner-provided data.
- Risk and fraud monitoring that analyzes behavioral, device, and blockchain signals.
- Smart contract execution, allowing users to go from fiat directly into staking, NFTs, or DeFi protocols.
The result is a dramatically shorter and cleaner onboarding flow that reduces dropout and complexity for both users and developers.
Why Stablecoin Payments Still Need a Backend
Stablecoins may run on permissionless networks, but most users don’t live in a permissionless world. They still pay with local bank accounts, debit cards, or wallets like Google Pay. They still need to prove who they are. And developers still need to worry about fraud, chargebacks, and regulatory scrutiny.
Transak’s bet is that as more fintechs, wallets, and even traditional financial institutions adopt stablecoins in their backend, the demand for compliant, modular infrastructure will explode.
Already, the company has partnered with MetaMask, Ledger, Animoca Brands, and dozens of wallets and exchanges. It has active or pending licenses in the U.S., EU, UK, Canada, India, Australia, UAE, and Hong Kong.
Embedded Finance, Crypto Edition
If this approach sounds familiar, that’s because it mirrors the rise of companies like Stripe (for payments) and Plaid (for banking data) in the web2 world. But in Transak’s case, the plumbing supports stablecoins-native flows.
A payroll platform might use Transak to pay freelancers in USDC globally. A remittance app might convert BRL (Brazilian Real) to USD stablecoins on the backend without exposing the user to crypto directly.
Conclusion
Transak’s approach stands out for its pragmatism. Rather than reinventing the wheel, the company is focused on solving the unglamorous but critical infrastructure challenges that stand between stablecoins and real-world usability.
By quietly abstracting the regulatory, technical, and user experience complexities of stablecoin payments, Transak is laying the groundwork for a more interoperable and inclusive financial future.