
In East London’s co-working spaces, there’s a certain optimism that’s fueled by seed-round term sheets and flat whites. You’ll notice an odd coexistence if you stroll through any of the fintech-heavy floors in Shoreditch or on the outskirts of the city: founders creating cryptocurrency trading platforms sharing desks with compliance consultants attempting to figure out what the FCA really wants. This may be the only place in Europe that adequately conveys the paradox of crypto entrepreneurship.
Just the numbers provide an interesting narrative. London accounted for nearly four-fifths of the approximately $3.6 billion invested in the UK’s fintech sector in 2025. Recent increases have included some significant increases. In April 2026, 9fin, a debt-market intelligence platform with blockchain hooks, closed a $170 million Series C. Around the same time, Crossover Markets Group, which develops infrastructure for trading digital assets, raised $31 million in a Series B. Merge, a startup that combines stablecoins with instant payment rails, is smaller but no less ambitious. It is based in London and Paris, employs just fifty people, and has a quiet confidence in international trade. These aren’t haphazard ideas written on napkins. They are hiring, funding, and constructing.
Beneath the surface, however, there is an ongoing tension. Several business leaders have publicly cautioned that Singapore, Hong Kong, and the Gulf states could steal British cryptocurrency entrepreneurs. The CEO of digital bank Zopa, Jaidev Janardana, has observed that the UK’s regulatory stance has shifted from encouraging competition to a state of cautious paralysis. According to Tim Levene of Augmentum Fintech, instead of rushing for British funding, entrepreneurs are increasingly looking to the Middle East or Asia for funding. When several CEOs say the same thing in the same week, it’s difficult to ignore a pattern.
Early in 2025, the FCA released draft proposals for cryptocurrency regulations. The industry was cautiously relieved but extremely skeptical of the specifics. Stablecoins continue to be a special pain. There hasn’t been a clear resolution to reserve requirements, consumer protections, or how these tokens work with the current banking system. With its MiCA framework, the EU took the lead. Despite its chaos, the US has changed under recent political leadership to adopt a more permissive stance. Britain, which invented the regulatory sandbox idea that enabled Monzo and Revolut to prosper, is now witnessing other countries outperform it using the model it created.
Founders continue to appear, though. The London-based startup Coinrule, which provides automated cryptocurrency trading tools, has been steadily growing its user base. Operating out of the City of London, Cryptio connects blockchain data with conventional accounting systems for business clients who require their digital asset books to withstand an audit. In order to grow its blockchain-based investment platform, OpenTrade raised $17 million in May 2026. There’s a sense that no competing city can easily match London’s extensive financial infrastructure, which includes banks, lawyers, and institutional memory.
The maturity of the UK crypto fintech scene is what makes it truly fascinating. These aren’t crazy 2017 token launches. These days, startups that are drawing significant funding are tackling unglamorous issues like regulatory reporting, tax compliance, fraud detection, and cross-border settlement. Major exchanges are among the clients of Sardine, a company that assists fintech and cryptocurrency businesses in combating fraud. The complicated process of calculating cryptocurrency taxes is automated by TaxBit. Something more resilient has taken the place of the glamour. It’s another matter entirely whether the government acknowledges that change promptly. The talent, capital networks, and institutional knowledge are still present, but they spoil if they are left out for too long.