According to PYMNTS.com, Bitget Wallet is launching a major new payments-focused hub after its user base surpassed 90 million globally. The company’s Chief Marketing Officer, Jamie Elkaleh, stated the shift is a direct response to growing demand for on-chain finance that mirrors how money works in a digital economy. The new hub combines crypto cards, QR payments, bank transfers, and in-app shopping into a single front-facing flow, making it one of the few self-custodial platforms to support all major crypto payment methods. Users can spend crypto globally via Mastercard and Visa networks, pay locally with QR codes, or transfer stablecoins to bank accounts. The announcement frames this as part of a broader transition where crypto wallets are becoming daily financial accounts.
The Pivot From Vault To Wallet
Here’s the thing: this isn’t just a feature update. It’s a fundamental repositioning. For years, the primary use case for a self-custodial wallet like Bitget was speculation and holding—a digital vault. Now, they’re explicitly trying to become a digital wallet you actually use, for everything. Spending, sending, saving. It’s the classic tech playbook: acquire a massive user base with one core function (in this case, crypto trading and storage), then expand into adjacent services to increase engagement and, ultimately, revenue. With 90 million users, they’ve got the scale to try it. But can they make it intuitive enough for daily use? That’s the billion-dollar question.
The On-Chain Banking Pitch
Jamie Elkaleh’s quote really lays out the battle lines. He talks about removing the “frictions” of traditional finance: slow settlement, opaque fees, geographic limits. And he’s not wrong. A stablecoin transfer on the right chain is faster and often cheaper than a SWIFT wire. The promise is “modern banking, but on-chain.” But let’s be real. For all its faults, traditional banking is *reliable* and, crucially, comes with consumer protections and regulatory backstops that the wild west of crypto simply doesn’t have. Bitget’s challenge is to make an on-chain experience feel as seamless and secure as tapping a debit card at a coffee shop. Combining cards, QR codes, and bank transfers in one app is a strong start, but the real test is in the mundane details—like disputing a charge or recovering from a user error.
Are The Suits And Ties Really Here?
The PYMNTS article adds a crucial layer of context with that quote from Citi’s Ryan Rugg. When asked if crypto’s normalization means massive growth or just wider, modest participation, she said, “It’s not just the hoodies anymore. The suits and ties have arrived.” I think that’s the most telling part of this whole story. Bitget’s pivot isn’t happening in a vacuum. It’s a response to a perceived maturation of the market. The infrastructure from traditional finance (like Visa/Mastercard networks) is now plugging into crypto, and institutional players like Citi are building bridges. This payments push by Bitget is betting that the next wave of users won’t be degens chasing memecoins, but normies who just want a better way to move money. It’s a bet on the “suits and ties” wanting on-chain utility. Whether that bet pays off depends entirely on delivering an experience that’s not just powerful, but boringly simple.
