Kraken just cracked open a door that’s been locked to crypto firms since the Federal Reserve was founded. On March 4, 2026, Kraken Financial received Federal Reserve master account approval. That’s not a small thing. That’s a very big thing.
The Kansas City Fed granted the account after a risk review of Kraken’s business model and compliance setup. It’s classified as a limited-purpose Tier 3 account, meaning restrictions apply. The approval covers a one-year preliminary period. Both Kraken and the Kansas City Fed made the announcement after the Wall Street Journal broke the story first. Classic.
Kraken Financial is a Wyoming-chartered Special Purpose Depository Institution, affiliated with the crypto exchange Kraken and its parent Payward. It runs on a full-reserve model. No fractional lending. No funny business. That structure apparently helped make the case to regulators after over five years of regulatory engagement.
Kraken Financial runs full-reserve. No fractional lending. No shortcuts. That discipline apparently convinced regulators after five years of trying.
So what does a master account actually do? It gives Kraken direct access to Fedwire, the system that moves over four trillion dollars between banks every single day. No middlemen. No correspondent banks taking their cut. For institutional clients moving money between banks and crypto holdings, that’s faster, cheaper, and cleaner. Eventually, atomic settlement between fiat and crypto becomes possible. Eventually.
The account mirrors what the Fed calls a “skinny” master account. No discount window access. No bank-only perks. Just the core payment rails. Banking groups hate it anyway. They’ve raised concerns about payment system stability and the precedent this sets for other crypto firms eyeing Fed access. Regulatory transparency is also on their list of grievances. The tension around alleged debanking of crypto accounts quietly sits in the background of all this. Notably, the approval was granted before finalization of the Federal Reserve Board’s broader policy framework, a point critics have not let slide.
Senator Cynthia Lummis called it a watershed milestone. Industry observers see it as the first real convergence between crypto infrastructure and sovereign financial rails. Kraken is now a directly connected financial institution. That sentence would have sounded absurd five years ago.
Rollout starts with institutional clients on the Kraken platform. More capabilities depend on further regulatory coordination. Kraken Financial must hold liquid assets equaling 100% of customer fiat deposits at all times under Wyoming’s full-reserve requirement. Kraken has built a strong track record in security since 2011, with no large-scale breaches reported in its history as a crypto exchange. The door is open. Barely. But open.