Crypto infrastructure startups raised more than $8 billion in venture capital during 2024, according to The Block Research. These companies build the backend systems that exchanges, custodians, wallets, and institutional platforms depend on. The category includes custody technology, trading infrastructure, compliance tools, data analytics, and blockchain node services. Unlike consumer-facing crypto companies, infrastructure startups generate recurring revenue from enterprise clients and benefit from growing transaction volumes regardless of token prices.
What Crypto Infrastructure Covers
Custody and key management form the largest infrastructure subcategory. Fireblocks, valued at $8 billion, provides multi-party computation custody used by more than 1,800 institutional clients. Its platform has processed more than $6 trillion in digital asset transactions since launch. Anchorage Digital became the first federally chartered crypto bank in the US in 2021, holding a national trust bank charter from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. BitGo, acquired by Galaxy Digital in 2023 for approximately $1.2 billion, provides custody and settlement for more than 700 institutional clients.

Trading infrastructure companies build the matching engines, order management systems, and market-making tools that power crypto exchanges. Talos, valued at $1.5 billion, provides institutional trading technology to banks and asset managers. Copper provides custody and prime services with a focus on European and Middle Eastern institutions. FalconX, valued at $8 billion, offers institutional-grade trading and credit services. Fintech revenue growth at a 23% CAGR includes significant contributions from crypto infrastructure companies.
Compliance and analytics companies serve both crypto businesses and traditional financial institutions. Chainalysis, valued at $8.6 billion, provides blockchain analytics to more than 500 government agencies and financial institutions across 70 countries. Elliptic and TRM Labs offer competing analytics platforms. These companies are essential because anti-money laundering regulations require financial institutions to monitor blockchain transactions for illicit activity.
Why Infrastructure Is Attracting Capital
Crypto infrastructure companies generate more predictable revenue than token-dependent businesses. Fireblocks charges transaction fees and platform subscriptions. Chainalysis sells annual software licences. Alchemy charges per API request. These business models produce recurring revenue that investors value more highly than speculative token economics.
Regulatory pressure is increasing demand for compliance infrastructure. The EU’s MiCA regulation requires all crypto service providers to implement anti-money laundering monitoring. The US Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network has expanded reporting requirements for crypto businesses. Every new regulation creates demand for compliance technology, benefiting infrastructure companies like Chainalysis and ComplyAdvantage.
Institutional adoption requires institutional-grade infrastructure. When BlackRock launches a bitcoin ETF, it needs a custodian (Coinbase Custody), a market maker (Jane Street, Virtu Financial), and a surveillance provider (Nasdaq Surveillance). Each of these roles is filled by infrastructure companies that earn fees on every transaction. More than 30,000 fintech companies globally include a growing number of crypto infrastructure providers.
Geographic Distribution
The United States hosts the largest concentration of crypto infrastructure companies, with major hubs in New York, San Francisco, and Miami. New York-based companies like Chainalysis, Fireblocks (US headquarters), and Paxos benefit from proximity to Wall Street institutions. San Francisco remains the centre for developer tools and blockchain node infrastructure, home to Alchemy, Coinbase, and Ripple.
Singapore, Switzerland, and the UK are growing centres. Singapore’s MAS licensing framework has attracted Anchorage Digital, Paxos, and Talos to establish regional offices. Switzerland’s Crypto Valley in Zug hosts Ethereum Foundation and hundreds of blockchain infrastructure companies. London is home to Copper, Elliptic, and Blockchain.com. Fintech innovation accelerating across 80+ countries includes crypto infrastructure development in emerging markets.
The Outlook for Crypto Infrastructure
Infrastructure companies are likely to be the biggest long-term winners in the crypto industry. Just as AWS, Stripe, and Twilio became more valuable than most of the applications built on top of them, crypto infrastructure companies could become the most valuable layer of the digital asset ecosystem.
Consolidation is already happening. Galaxy Digital acquired BitGo. PayPal acquired Curv, a custody technology company. Visa acquired CurrencyCloud for cross-border payments. Banks are building or acquiring infrastructure capabilities rather than building from scratch.
The $8 billion invested in crypto infrastructure startups during 2024 reflects a market that is maturing beyond speculation. The growth from 20 to over 300 fintech unicorns includes multiple crypto infrastructure companies. As the digital asset market grows, the infrastructure that supports it will grow proportionally.



