YC Now Lets Startups Take Seed Checks in Stablecoins

YC Now Lets Startups Take Seed Checks in Stablecoins


  • Y Combinator now offers all accepted startups the option to receive their $500K seed investment via stablecoins on Base, Solana, or Ethereum, according to crypto YC partner Nemil Dala via The Block

  • The stablecoin option launches with YC’s spring 2026 batch and applies to the accelerator’s famous 7% equity deal

  • YC cites faster transfers for founders in emerging markets and follows its fall 2025 partnership with Base and Coinbase Ventures to boost blockchain startup applications

  • The move comes as U.S. crypto regulation becomes more favorable, with Silicon Valley accelerating blockchain investments

Y Combinator just made a major bet on crypto infrastructure. Starting with its spring 2026 batch, every startup accepted into the legendary accelerator can now receive its $500,000 seed check in stablecoins instead of traditional currency. The move marks the first time a top-tier Silicon Valley accelerator has embedded blockchain payments directly into its standard investment process, signaling a fundamental shift in how venture capital flows to founders worldwide.

Y Combinator just rewrote the rules for how seed checks get distributed. The Silicon Valley kingmaker announced it’s giving all accepted startups the option to receive their funding in stablecoins – a first for any major accelerator and a clear signal that crypto infrastructure is moving from experiment to standard operating procedure.

The mechanics are straightforward but revolutionary. YC’s “standard deal” – $500,000 for 7% equity – can now be executed on Base, Solana, or Ethereum blockchains starting with the spring 2026 batch. Founders simply choose whether they want dollars wired the old-fashioned way or USDC hitting their wallet within minutes.

“Stablecoin transfers are often more effective, specifically for founders working in emerging markets,” crypto YC partner Nemil Dala told The Block. It’s not just talk – YC has been quietly building toward this moment since last fall when it partnered with Base and Coinbase Ventures to actively recruit blockchain-focused founders.

The timing isn’t accidental. While YC processes thousands of applications each cycle, international founders often face weeks of banking delays, currency conversion fees, and regulatory friction just to access their seed capital. A stablecoin transfer collapses that timeline to hours, not weeks. For a founder in Lagos or Buenos Aires dealing with volatile local currencies and restrictive banking systems, the difference is existential.