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Hyperlocalizing crypto access for broader adoption

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The Hidden Friction in Global Crypto Adoption​


Across Africa, Asia, and Latin America, converting cash or a bank balance into crypto remains hard, ironically, in regions where adoption is strongest. Chainalysis ranks India and Nigeria among the top markets, with Indonesia, Vietnam, the Philippines, and Brazil also prominent. Interest here is driven less by speculation and more by necessity. In these markets, users face high fees, low trust, and slow settlement when buying crypto with local currency.

In Nigeria, for instance, a simple $50 transaction through an international payment gateway can cost 10% in fees before it even reaches its destination. This barrier, often described as the fiat onboarding problem, causes the vision of borderless finance to collapse at the exact moment users attempt to enter the ecosystem.

Challenges in Various Markets​


In Argentina, annual inflation reached 117.8% in 2023. Such conditions push many to stablecoins as a lifeline for preserving value amid currency meltdowns. In 2025, Kenya leads globally in mobile money usage with 91% market penetration countrywide. Platforms like M-Pesa and MTN Mobile Money dominate daily commerce, and crypto is now starting to piggyback on these networks for remittances, online commerce, and peer-to-peer transfers.

In the Philippines, money sent home by migrant workers is about 8.3% of GDP, amounting to $38B. Crypto is increasingly seen as a faster and cheaper alternative for moving these funds. Traditional channels remain expensive and slow.

In some corridors, especially in Africa, fees can climb into the double digits, eating away a significant chunk of low-income workers' transfers. By contrast, local bank transfers and mobile wallet payments cost a fraction of that.

The same users driving crypto’s global growth are those facing the steepest fiat-to-crypto barriers. Many in emerging markets lack access to international credit or debit cards, yet cards remain the default on-ramp for most exchanges.

TransFi’s Hyperlocal Stack for Real-World Payment Flows​


TransFi operates at the infrastructure level as a modular, API-driven platform. It connects crypto businesses to the localized payment rails that matter in emerging markets. Through a single API integration, a project can tap into 300+ local payment methods across 100+ countries.

This includes national systems like DANA in Indonesia, GCash in the Philippines, and M-Pesa in Kenya, among many others. In effect, TransFi abstracts the complexity of each country’s financial plumbing and exposes it through a unified crypto-to-fiat gateway.

TransFi’s stack supports the full range of money movement between fiat and digital assets. Its capabilities are organized into a few core products.

Hyper-localizing for Strategy: Faster Onboarding & Higher Conversions​


The most significant innovation in local-first financial infrastructure is not what the user sees. It is the backend system that maintains security, ensures compliance, and adapts to regulatory expectations across many countries.

For example, a Solana-based social dApp recently integrated TransFi to enable user top-ups via local channels. The results were dramatic: onboarding time dropped by more than 50% and the number of funded wallets jumped by 38% after the switch.

TransFi’s infrastructure helped turn a previously fragmented onboarding process into a smooth experience, with clear boosts to user acquisition and retention.

The First Mile Opportunity​


For years, the crypto world excelled at moving value across blockchains, but struggled to connect that value to local financial systems. That is now beginning to change. Providers are building the “first mile” of crypto: the rails that link digital assets to everyday money in emerging economies.

A handful of well-known crypto fintechs made buying crypto easy with a card, but they largely catered to users in North America and Europe. The real growth opportunity lies in the vast user base of Asia, Africa, and Latin America that has so far been underserved.

Crypto platforms are realizing that to win in emerging markets, they must integrate deeply with local payment culture and regulations.

Closing the Gap Between Innovation and Adoption​


Today, TransFi is operational across 100+ countries, 40+ fiat currencies, and 130+ digital assets. By handling the messy local details, TransFi lets its partners focus on building great user experiences.

As emerging markets continue to dominate crypto adoption metrics, one thing is increasingly clear: the next phase of growth in Web3 will be defined by how easily new users can cross from the world of fiat into the world of crypto.

Bridging that gap at scale requires building local rails for global crypto. TransFi and similar infrastructure players are doing the unglamorous but critical work of connecting these dots. In doing so, they are helping ensure that crypto’s promise of an open, inclusive financial system truly reaches those who need it most.

This article has been published in thestreet.com via Yahoo News.

 
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