Fireblocks unveils stablecoin acceptance SDK with live demo set for July 21
The digital asset infrastructure giant now supports stablecoin deposits across 800+ wallets and exchanges with automatic conversion and compliance baked in
Fireblocks just made it a lot easier for businesses to accept stablecoins. The digital asset infrastructure provider has rolled out a major upgrade to its software development kit that enables stablecoin deposits across more than 800 wallets and exchanges, complete with automatic currency conversion, compliance checks, and audit tools.
A live demonstration is scheduled for July 21, giving the industry a front-row seat to what could become a critical piece of plumbing for institutional stablecoin adoption.
What the SDK actually does
Instead of forcing businesses to cobble together their own integration across hundreds of wallets and exchanges, the Fireblocks SDK handles the messy parts: accepting deposits, converting between currencies automatically, running compliance checks, and generating audit trails.
Support for over 800 wallets and exchanges means the SDK essentially covers the vast majority of places where stablecoins live and move. The built-in compliance layer is arguably the most important feature for institutional players, as any infrastructure that doesn’t include compliance tooling is essentially asking its users to build a second system on top of it.
The numbers behind Fireblocks
Fireblocks processes over $200 billion in stablecoin transactions every month. The company has also secured more than $10 trillion in cumulative digital asset transactions across over 150 blockchain networks.
Founded in 2018 by Michael Shaulov, Idan Ofrat, and Pavel Berengoltz, the company was born out of a response to a major exchange hack. The SDK update also builds on a strategic partnership with Circle announced in September 2025, which focused on enhancing access to USDC and cross-chain liquidity solutions.
Why this matters for investors and the broader market
The competitive landscape is worth watching. Fireblocks isn’t the only company building stablecoin infrastructure, but its combination of scale, security track record, and now a comprehensive SDK puts it in a strong position. Companies like Bridge (recently acquired by Stripe) and Paxos are also pushing hard into stablecoin infrastructure, but Fireblocks’ existing network of institutional clients gives it a distribution advantage.
The July 21 demo will be a revealing moment. For traders, the practical implications could include more seamless movement of stablecoins across platforms, potentially lower transaction costs, and better compliance documentation, which matters increasingly as regulators tighten reporting requirements.