Company

Range

Compliance layer for stablecoin money movement

A startup building a real-time financial control layer that screens and reconciles money movement across stablecoin, crypto, and fiat rails.

Range is a startup building the compliance and control plumbing beneath the stablecoin economy, a financial control layer for businesses that move money across stablecoin, crypto, and traditional fiat rails. In 2026 it closed an oversubscribed $8.3 million Series A in a deal that reflected where venture money is heading: toward the rails, controls, and reporting tools rather than speculative tokens.

What Range builds

Range organizes its offering around two products. Unify acts as a real-time ledger that consolidates bank accounts, custodians, wallets, and exchanges into a single view of where a company's money is. Protect is a pre-execution control layer that screens each on-chain transaction before funds move, checking for sanctions exposure, fraud, regulatory breaches, and internal policy violations.

The problem is structural. Stablecoins settle in seconds and cannot be reversed, while most of the risk, compliance, and treasury controls financial institutions rely on were designed for a slower world and operate on transactions that have already cleared. As co-founder and chief executive Andres Monteoliva has put it, the hard part was never moving stablecoins but maintaining real-time control and audit readiness across both rails.

Scale and customers

By its own account, Range monitors more than 200 networks and 100 stablecoins in real time, protects over $30 billion in assets, and connects banks, custodians, and wallets through thousands of integrations. Its customer list includes Circle, the Solana Foundation, Stellar, Squads, and Jupiter. Those figures are reported by the company and have not been independently audited, but they sketch the scale Range is claiming.

The $8.3 million round, which brought total funding to about $11 million, was led by TX Ventures and included SixThirty alongside crypto-native investors Maven 11 Capital and Onigiri Capital. The mix of fintech and crypto backers signals that both camps see the same convergence and want exposure to the connective tissue between them.

Why it matters

Range's raise is one of several recent infrastructure-focused deals in the stablecoin sector, part of a clear theme: investors are funding the picks-and-shovels businesses that support digital dollars rather than the tokens themselves. As jurisdictions from the United States to the European Union build stablecoin-specific rules, regulated banks and fintechs need tooling for transaction monitoring, sanctions screening, and reporting.

For builders, the opening is in the gap Range is chasing and the many adjacent ones around it. As money moves at blockchain speed, the systems that verify, screen, and reconcile it in real time become essential rather than optional, an area where the old financial stack does not yet fit the new rails.

Frequently asked questions

What is Range?

Range builds a financial control layer for companies operating across stablecoin, crypto, and fiat rails. Its products consolidate accounts into a single real-time ledger and screen on-chain transactions for compliance and risk before money moves.

How much did Range raise?

Range raised an oversubscribed $8.3 million Series A led by TX Ventures, bringing total funding to about $11 million. The round's valuation was not publicly disclosed.

What problem does Range solve?

Stablecoins settle in seconds and cannot be reversed, while many compliance and treasury controls were built for slower, already-cleared transactions. Range screens transactions before they execute and gives companies a real-time, audit-ready view across both crypto and fiat rails.

Who are Range's customers?

The company says its customers include Circle, the Solana Foundation, Stellar, Squads, and Jupiter. Its reported metrics are self-disclosed and have not been independently audited.

Why is stablecoin compliance attracting funding?

As regulators build stablecoin-specific rules, regulated banks and fintechs need tools for transaction monitoring, sanctions screening, and reporting, drawing venture capital toward compliance and treasury infrastructure rather than speculative tokens.