
Infinite is pushing deeper into the overlap between traditional banking and stablecoin infrastructure, launching a new account product that tries to collapse the gap between the two.
The company said its new Infinite Accounts are dedicated bank accounts with unique routing numbers that support both standard fiat payments and stablecoin transactions through a single API. In practice, that means businesses can access familiar banking functions such as deposits and wires while also using blockchain-based settlement tools without stitching together separate providers.
That is the real significance of the launch. Infinite is not offering stablecoin services alongside banking as two loosely connected products. It is presenting them as one integrated account stack.
According to the company, Infinite Accounts will support deposits, withdrawals, ACH transfers, domestic wires and international wires on the fiat side, while also enabling stablecoin-specific functions such as minting and burning fiat-backed stablecoins and handling onchain transfers.
For business users, especially those already operating across borders, that combination could prove attractive. Treasury teams and payment operators increasingly want to move between bank money and tokenized dollars without rebuilding workflows each time funds cross from one system into the other. Infinite appears to be aiming directly at that operational friction.
The move arrives during a period of stronger institutional interest in stablecoin infrastructure, a trend that has been helped along by the GENIUS Act, which became law last summer. The regulatory backdrop has made it easier for companies to frame stablecoins not only as crypto-native tools, but as part of a more serious payments and treasury stack.
Infinite’s banking layer is powered by Erebor Bank, adding another piece of institutional infrastructure to that picture.
What emerges from all of this is a fairly clear direction of travel. Stablecoin adoption at the institutional level is no longer mainly about trading venues or crypto wallets. It is increasingly about account design, payment rails and APIs that let businesses treat fiat and tokenized dollars as parts of the same system rather than separate worlds.