The death of the crypto startup: RIP 2017

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In 2017, a handful of developers with a whitepaper and a GitHub repository could launch a token or a crypto startup in a matter of days. Capital requirements were low, licensing was either non-existent or seen as an afterthought, and a compelling idea was usually enough to draw thousands of retail buyers into an ICO before a product even existed.

In 2026, though, many customer-facing crypto companies entering regulated markets need lawyers, compliance staff, banking partners, an anti-money-laundering program, and enough capital to satisfy licensing and operating requirements before they can serve customers at scale.

The crypto industry was built by anonymous founders shipping code from a bedroom, but now it runs on companies with balance sheets, licenses, and institutional sales teams. While crypto startups still exist, the barriers to building them now look much like those that have long protected traditional finance from new entrants.

The old crypto startup

The first decade of crypto entrepreneurship was characterized by low capital requirements, minimal regulatory friction, and a global pool of pseudonymous talent building in the open. Exchanges, wallets, and protocols could be assembled by small teams distributed across continents, coordinating mostly through Discord and GitHub.

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Ethereum itself launched in 2015 on the back of a public crowdsale that raised roughly $18 million from thousands of individual contributors rather than a syndicate of venture firms. The ICO boom of 2017 and 2018 pushed that model to its extreme. Any team with a website, a token contract, and a Telegram group could raise capital directly from the public, skipping the due diligence and vesting schedules venture funding imposed.

Some of those startups became durable infrastructure, but many more collapsed or turned out to be fraud, and the resulting investor losses became the central argument for the regulatory scrutiny that followed.

The era was marked by the absence of institutional gatekeeping. Developers didn’t need a bank, because payments were denominated in crypto. They didn’t need a state money transmitter license because regulators didn’t even know what token they were selling. They didn’t need to chase clients because early users found them through social media rather than procurement departments.

Entry costs, both financial and regulatory, were close to zero, which led to quite a bit of chaos but also to a lot of pretty interesting financial and social experiments.

The new reality

That’s no longer how the industry operates. A crypto company serving customers in the US, the EU, and Asia now has to operate under a licensing regime that looks and feels essentially the same as that of traditional banking.

A startup pursuing full multi-state coverage in the US can expect to spend $750,000 to $1.2 million over its first three years, with ongoing annual compliance costs exceeding $2 million once it reaches scale, according to industry licensing guides.

New York’s BitLicense is widely regarded as one of the most demanding state crypto approvals, with licensing advisers often advising applicants to budget more than a year and significant legal, compliance, and operating expenses for the process.

MiCA imposes minimum capital requirements from €50,000 for advisory services up to €150,000 for exchange platforms, figures that represent only the floor of the potential costs crypto companies have to face. The real expense lies in the governance structures, compliance staff, and the continuous reporting that MiCA demands, costs that analysts say have made European crypto operations substantially more expensive than they were eighteen months ago.

U.S. regulatory clarity has also come at a price. The GENIUS Act created a federal framework for payment stablecoins, but its operative requirements depend on implementing regulations and an effective date tied to those rules or 18 months after enactment. The CLARITY Act, meanwhile, remains a market-structure bill moving through the Senate rather than settled law.

All of that clarity is valuable, but it also raises the floor for what a legitimate operator must demonstrate before regulators allow it to operate at all. Licensing advisors now say these compliance investments are barriers that will protect early movers from low-cost competition.

The collapse of Terra and FTX changed how venture capital approaches the sector. Annual crypto venture funding fell from a peak above $44 billion in 2022 to roughly $9 billion in 2024, then recovered to more than $20 billion in 2025, according to Gate Ventures.

Galaxy Digital found that venture firms deployed about $4 billion across 355 crypto deals in the first quarter of 2026, with median deal size hitting an all-time high above $4.5 million. Late-stage companies captured 57% of all capital deployed, while pre-seed’s share of deal count slipped to 19%.

CryptoRank’s analysis of the same quarter found an even bigger divide: Series C and later rounds surged 1,020% year over year to command 28.4% of all venture capital across just nine deals, while seed and pre-seed combined made up only 5.2% of total capital raised. Analysts describe the result as a barbell market, heavy at the earliest and latest stages with a thinning middle, where growth-stage companies once raised the rounds that let them scale toward enterprise customers.

There are also fewer new funds forming to write those early checks. Investors committed just under $1.1 billion to eight new crypto-focused venture funds in the first quarter of 2026, the smallest quarterly total since 2020.

Capital raised now concentrates among a handful of firms operating at a scale unimaginable a few years ago. Andreessen Horowitz announced more than $15 billion across several firmwide venture strategies in January 2026, a raise that it said represented more than 18% of all U.S. venture capital dollars allocated in 2025.

Dragonfly closed a $650 million fourth fund in February, even as its managing partner, Robbie Hadick, described the broader crypto venture ecosystem as undergoing a “mass extinction event.”

Sector preferences also seem to have changed alongside stage preferences. Trading, exchange, and lending infrastructure drew nearly three-fifths of all first-quarter 2026 capital by Galaxy’s count, while payments and prediction markets, categories built around institutional infrastructure rather than consumer apps, accounted for the largest individual rounds of the quarter, including Kalshi’s roughly $1 billion raise.

Mergers and acquisitions have filled much of the gap left by organic, venture-funded growth. Crypto M&A hit a record $8.6 billion across 267 disclosed deals in 2025, nearly quadruple 2024’s total, according to PitchBook.

The pace has only accelerated: capital deployed through crypto M&A rose from $272 million in the fourth quarter of 2025 to $7.23 billion in the second quarter of 2026, a more than 26-fold increase in six months. Coinbase‘s $2.9 billion acquisition of Deribit remains the largest deal in crypto history, while Ripple spent $1.25 billion on prime broker Hidden Road as it built institutional infrastructure through acquisition rather than internal development.

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