Digital assets are becoming part of how mainstream finance runs, and that change has exposed a structural problem. Most companies still manage wallets, fund movement, compliance, and custody on separate tools. Each one works on its own, but getting them to work together takes constant effort.
This is the gap Cregis has spent close to a decade closing. Rather than offering a standalone wallet or payment product, it provides an enterprise infrastructure platform that brings together wallet infrastructure, fund flow orchestration, and institutional governance into a unified operational framework.
Cregis Product Architecture Overview
By the company’s own account, Cregis has never pivoted. It grew by answering one question over and over: How can enterprises manage digital assets more safely and efficiently? Over time, customer demand revealed three recurring infrastructure needs – wallet management, fund movement, and asset custody. Those three needs became the pillars the Cregis platform is building on: the wallet layer (WaaS), the fund flow layer (Flow), and the custody layer (Custody).
Cregis at a Glance – Quick Overview
There is a lot to unpack with Cregis, so before we get into the details, here is a simple overview of what it is and what it does:
- Wallet-as-a-Service (WaaS): the control layer that lets enterprises build crypto wallets into their own products via a single API, with MPC security splitting private keys into separate pieces.
- Flow: the movement layer that orchestrates fund movement between wallets, accounts, entities, and operational workflows, covering collection, routing, payouts, treasury movement, and settlement.
- Custody: the governance layer, built on bank-grade Hardware Security Modules (HSMs), combining secure key management with governance policies, approval workflows, compliance validation, and audit trails.
Cregis Wallet-as-a-Service (WaaS): The Control Layer
For most enterprises, digital asset operations begin with wallet infrastructure. This is where Cregis’s Wallet-as-a-Service, or WaaS, sits within the broader platform architecture. Companies need crypto wallets inside their own product, and building that infrastructure securely is hard and slow. WaaS gives them that whole stack as ready infrastructure. With a single API, one can build crypto wallets into a product so they generate addresses and process transactions. The controls are built for how a company operates. Approvals can require several sign-offs, the company defines its own risk rules, and address management keeps pace as volume climbs. Underneath all of it works MPC, the security model that splits each private key into separate pieces. No one person or device ever holds the full key.
Cregis Flow: The Movement Layer
Flow is the fund flow orchestration layer of the platform. The capability is not a payment processor or a checkout tool. The work happens one level deeper, in how digital assets move between wallets, accounts, entities, and the operational workflows a finance team runs every day. Collection, routing, payouts, treasury movement, and settlement all run through this one layer. Funds can be pooled from accounts on many chains, routed to the appropriate internal destinations, and paid to partners on whatever schedule the business sets, with manual steps automated. That covers the full lifecycle of a company’s funds, from the point they enter to the point they leave. The Payment Engine works as a component within Flow and extends Cregis to FX brokers, cross-border payment firms, and the wider fintech infrastructure.
Cregis Custody: The Governance Layer
As institutional adoption of digital assets grows, secure storage is only part of the challenge. Banks and enterprises also need stronger controls over how assets are managed, approved, and moved. To support these requirements, Cregis introduced Trust Vault in 2025. Designed for institutional digital asset operations, including custody, treasury, payments, stablecoin and RWA issuance, Trust Vault serves as the trusted key management and governance foundation behind the company’s institutional infrastructure. Built on bank-grade Hardware Security Modules (HSMs), Trust Vault combines secure key management with governance policies, approval workflows, compliance validation, and audit trails in a single operational framework. Together, these capabilities form the foundation of Cregis Custody, the company’s upcoming institutional custody offering.
TronGas Station and the Operations Hub: The Supporting Tools
Around those three core capabilities, a couple of smaller tools deal with the practical headaches that show up once you run crypto at volume. TronGas Station cuts your gas costs for USDT transfers on the Tron network. You pay a small fixed fee in USDT per transaction and skip the usual need to buy and stake TRX, which Cregis says saves up to 60 percent. The Operations and Security Hub ties the rest of the platform together and hands you role-based permissions, approval rules, transaction analytics, and round-the-clock monitoring.
Security and Compliance
Before a serious buyer signs off on infrastructure like this, the security review is usually the longest part of the conversation. Cregis has a lot to work with in that review, and most of it holds up. For institutions with higher security requirements, sensitive keys can be protected inside bank-grade Hardware Security Modules (HSMs), and CertiK has audited the smart contracts. Nine years in, the company reports zero security incidents. On the compliance side, Cregis has also built the certifications that institutional procurement teams typically expect: SOC 2 Type I and SOC 2 Type II, and ISO 27001. Compliance carries through to how money moves. Cregis screens transactions through Elliptic, so the system flags high-risk addresses and tainted funds before they reach your wallets.
Who Cregis Is For
Cregis fits a range of businesses that handle crypto, but several specific businesses can get the best value out of it: Banks, financial market infrastructures (FMIs), and exchanges; Forex platforms; PSPs, fintechs, and financial institutions; and Web3 companies.
Cregis vs. Competitors
Most providers in this space operate across different parts of the digital asset infrastructure stack. Fireblocks provides institutional-grade custody and wallet infrastructure; Cobo offers wallet infrastructure alongside developer-focused tooling; Dfns provides infrastructure for embedded wallet use cases. Cregis takes a more integrated approach, combining wallet infrastructure, fund flow orchestration, and operational governance into a single platform for end-to-end enterprise fund movement.
The Trade-offs
Pros
- Proven track record: Cregis has operated since 2017 with no major security incidents, more than $300 billion in cumulative transaction volume, and over 4,000 clients across 50+ countries.
- Strong balance of capability and cost: Cregis offers a broader range of enterprise capabilities while maintaining a more accessible commercial model.
- Compliance built into operations: Governance controls, approval workflows, AML screening, and audit trails are integrated into everyday fund operations.
Cons
- Enterprise-oriented onboarding: Cregis is designed primarily for institutional and enterprise clients, meaning access and evaluation typically require sales-led onboarding.
- Enterprise deployment model: Pricing and architecture vary depending on deployment type.
- No quick self-serve trial: full access runs through a demo and sales process, with only a limited free tier to test first.
Final Thoughts
Cregis is built around a simple idea: managing the full lifecycle of digital asset operations through a single platform. Rather than replacing one point solution with another, it aims to reduce the operational complexity that comes from managing multiple vendors and disconnected workflows. For teams operating at scale, especially exchanges, payment providers, brokers, and Web3 companies with complex transaction flows, this consolidation reduces fragmentation across tools and operational layers. At the same time, the platform is modular, which means smaller teams or narrower use cases can still start with specific components—such as wallet infrastructure or payment flows—and expand over time as needs evolve.


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