While Wall Street's biggest banks are still getting their ducks in a row to offer crypto trading, SoFi Technologies decided to skip the line. The fintech lender just rolled out the ability for everyday customers to buy, sell and hold cryptocurrencies directly inside its FDIC-insured banking app.
This isn't just another crypto exchange launching. SoFi last month became the first nationally chartered U.S. bank to offer retail crypto trading, a milestone that represents a significant shift in how digital assets are integrating into the traditional financial system. It's also a comeback story: SoFi actually shut down its crypto service two years ago while pursuing its banking license. Now that it has that license in hand, crypto is back, and this time it's happening inside a regulated bank.
The timing makes sense. Regulators have reversed years of caution around crypto, and interest in digital assets is surging again heading into year-end. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and FDIC have clarified that banks can now engage in crypto custody and execution. That green light means major players like Charles Schwab, Morgan Stanley and PNC are expected to follow SoFi's lead in the coming months.
For SoFi, this fits neatly into its broader ambition to become a one-stop shop where members can bank, borrow, invest, and now trade crypto, all on a single, regulated platform.
"I believe blockchain technology will fundamentally change EVERY way finance is done throughout the world by making money movement faster, cheaper and safer, while opening new ways for people to borrow better, invest better, spend and save better," SoFi CEO Anthony Noto said in a November press release. "It's critical to give our members a secure and regulated way to step into the future of money."
The relaunch gives customers access to more than 25 cryptocurrencies, including Bitcoin, Ethereum and Solana.
The SoFi Advantage
Here's what makes SoFi's approach different: instead of moving money to a separate exchange, SoFi members can trade crypto directly using funds sitting in their SoFi Checking and Savings accounts. Those accounts are FDIC insured, which matters to people who want to keep their financial life in one place.
That integration is SoFi's competitive edge in a crowded crypto market dominated by non-bank platforms like Coinbase and Robinhood. According to internal company data, roughly 60% of SoFi members who own crypto say they would prefer to trade and hold digital assets with a licensed bank rather than a traditional crypto exchange.
After years of regulatory pressure that kept banks on the sidelines, the Trump administration has moved quickly to open the door for crypto activities inside federally regulated institutions. In July, Trump signed a federal framework for dollar-pegged stablecoins, while bank regulators clarified in May that custody and execution of crypto assets are permitted.
That regulatory shift has triggered what many see as the next phase of crypto adoption: bringing digital assets inside the banking system rather than keeping them in parallel ecosystems.
Beyond trading, Noto has outlined plans for SoFi to eventually issue its own stablecoin, expand blockchain-powered remittances, and allow customers to borrow against crypto holdings.
What You Can Actually Do
With SoFi Crypto, members can:
- Buy, sell, and hold 25+ cryptocurrencies including BTC, ETH and SOL.
- Trade instantly using funds already sitting in SoFi Checking or Savings.
- Manage everything in one app alongside banking, investing, and borrowing.
- Learn as they go with in-app guidance designed for first-time users.
The platform is built with bank-grade security and oversight, though SoFi is clear that crypto itself is not FDIC insured and carries risk, like any digital asset investment.
SoFi's move highlights the intensifying race among fintechs and banks to become the primary financial hub for younger consumers. Much like Robinhood and Coinbase, SoFi is chasing the idea of an "everything app" for money: one place where users can trade, save, spend, borrow and invest without leaving the ecosystem.
Getting Started
To access SoFi Crypto, users need a SoFi Checking and Savings account. From there, members can open a crypto account, fund it through their bank balance, and begin trading directly inside the SoFi app as access rolls out.
For investors looking to explore digital assets inside a regulated banking platform and manage crypto alongside the rest of their finances, SoFi's new offering brings that option into the mainstream.




