Another milestone for regulated crypto-fiat payments: this payment infrastructure provider has now secured Money Transmitter Licenses across 13 U.S. states, with South Dakota being the latest addition to their compliance roadmap.



The expanding state coverage reflects a broader shift toward accessible, regulated digital payment rails. By holding MTLs in multiple jurisdictions, the platform is positioning itself to bridge traditional finance and crypto ecosystems while maintaining regulatory guardrails.

This incremental state-by-state expansion strategy has become the go-to playbook for crypto payment firms aiming to scale securely. Each new license represents operational clearance and customer trust—especially in regions where fiat-crypto on-ramps remain heavily scrutinized.

$ACH continues to reflect this compliance-first trajectory in the Web3 payments space.
ACH2.58%
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CexIsBadvip
· 01-17 04:51
Another state is added... Honestly, this license-by-license approach will take forever to cover them all. Why not just push for a federal-level solution directly?
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MemeKingNFTvip
· 01-14 15:53
MTL in 13 states? Looks like they're running a compliance marathon, but can this really save the $ACH token price... It happens every time, license gets added and the token price drops each time, a typical case of "good news is followed by bad news."
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quietly_stakingvip
· 01-14 15:52
13 states now, take it slow, anyway, regulation is not an urgent matter
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ChainWallflowervip
· 01-14 15:52
13 states now? South Dakota was added pretty quickly... This compliance route is really getting more competitive, it feels like everyone is racing to get more licenses.
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OnlyUpOnlyvip
· 01-14 15:49
NGL, this approach of spending money state by state to get licenses is really a long-term game... How much patience does it take?
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ProofOfNothingvip
· 01-14 15:48
There are 13 states now. South Dakota really dares to follow this compliance route... Honestly, taking it step by step state by state, even if it's fast, it will take at least two years. $ACH this wave is stable, but I'm just worried that new regulations might come and disrupt the scene later.
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