Kraken and MoneyGram have opened a new crypto-to-cash withdrawal route that lets Kraken customers turn Bitcoin and other digital assets into local cash across more than 100 countries.
The global partnership connects Kraken’s exchange and compliance infrastructure with MoneyGram’s retail payout network. Kraken users will be able to withdraw crypto as cash in hundreds of fiat currencies through MoneyGram’s cash pickup system, giving the exchange a physical off-ramp in markets where bank transfers, cards or local crypto liquidity can still be unreliable.
The service is rolling out in phases across Kraken platforms, with coverage planned for clients in the United States, Europe, Latin America, Africa and parts of Asia Pacific. Kraken handles customer onboarding and identity verification, while MoneyGram provides the licensed money transmission layer through its regulated global payments infrastructure.
Cash Access Becomes The Real Adoption Test
The feature targets one of crypto’s oldest problems: getting value out of an exchange and into everyday spending power. Bitcoin can move globally without a bank account, but users still need local currency for rent, food, travel, bills and emergencies. That gap is especially important in countries where banking rails are expensive, slow or hard to access.
MoneyGram gives Kraken a distribution layer that pure crypto apps cannot easily replicate. The payments company says its network reaches nearly 500,000 retail locations across more than 200 countries and territories. For Kraken, that turns a crypto balance into something closer to a global cash-access product rather than only an exchange account.
The structure also keeps the first rollout focused on withdrawals, not open-ended remittances. Customers are moving funds from crypto into local currency through MoneyGram’s payout network. Later phases are expected to add local bank deposits and broader cross-border money movement options across Kraken and the Krak global money app.
MoneyGram Pushes Deeper Into Digital Dollars
The Kraken deal fits MoneyGram’s wider shift toward blockchain-based payments. MoneyGram recently launched MGUSD on Stellar, giving the remittance company its own dollar-backed stablecoin inside a consumer payments network. That move put MoneyGram directly into the race to make stablecoins useful beyond exchange trading pairs.
The same payment trend is spreading across larger financial networks. Mastercard’s always-on stablecoin settlement pushshows how blockchain rails are moving into back-end payment infrastructure, while a proposed Stripe, Visa, Mastercard and Coinbase stablecoin consortium points to growing competition over who controls digital-dollar settlement.
Kraken’s MoneyGram link adds a different piece: cash. Stablecoins can make settlement faster, but cash pickup still matters in regions where people use digital balances to receive value, protect savings or move money internationally, then need physical local currency at the end of the transaction.
Exchanges Are Moving Closer To Payment Networks
Kraken has been expanding beyond spot crypto trading into banking, payments and traditional assets. The exchange’s broader payment-rail push already includes Kraken Financial’s Federal Reserve master account, which gave its Wyoming-chartered bank direct access to core U.S. payment infrastructure.
MoneyGram gives that strategy a global retail counterpart. Instead of relying only on bank transfers, card rails or wallet-to-wallet crypto movement, Kraken can now offer a route from digital assets to physical cash in markets where MoneyGram already has payout reach.
The practical details will decide how important the rollout becomes. Users will watch country coverage, supported assets, fees, cash limits, compliance checks, payout speed and whether bank deposits arrive quickly after the first phase. The direction is already clear: crypto exchanges are no longer competing only on trading pairs and fees. They are trying to become money-movement platforms that connect Bitcoin, stablecoins, local bank rails and cash access inside one user flow.



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