The New York-based payments company has landed a major capital injection to scale exactly that vision: turning stablecoins into a global, card-based payment rail that works as seamlessly as traditional finance.
The company announced a fresh $250 million Series C raise that values Rain at $1.95 billion, pushing its total funding to $338 million. The round was led by Iconiq and backed by a mix of long-time supporters and new institutional investors, reflecting growing conviction around stablecoin payment infrastructure rather than speculative crypto exposure.
Rain’s fundraising comes after a year of explosive operational growth. In 2025 alone, the company multiplied its active card base by 30 times, while annualized payment volumes expanded nearly fortyfold. That kind of growth has helped shift Rain’s story from “promising infrastructure startup” to “scaled payments platform.”
According to CEO Farooq Malik, the surge reflects a simple reality: stablecoins are increasingly used to move money, but adoption depends on tools people already understand. Cards, apps, and instant usability matter more than underlying blockchain complexity.
The latest round included continued participation from investors such as Galaxy Digital’s venture arm, Sapphire Ventures, Dragonfly, Lightspeed, Norwest, and Endeavor Catalyst, alongside new backing from Bessemer Venture Partners and FirstMark.
Rather than chasing token exposure, these firms are betting on infrastructure that benefits regardless of which stablecoin or chain ultimately dominates. Rain’s position as a principal member of the Visa network gives it a powerful advantage: instant global acceptance without forcing merchants or users to change behavior.
Rain’s core offering is an end-to-end platform that lets companies launch compliant stablecoin-backed cards through a single integration. Those cards can be used anywhere Visa is accepted, while settlements occur on-chain.
The platform supports major dollar-backed stablecoins such as USDT and USDC, and connects across multiple blockchains including Ethereum, Solana, Tron, and Stellar. This multi-chain design allows enterprises to optimize for cost, speed, or jurisdiction without rebuilding their payments stack.
With new funding secured, Rain plans to accelerate its rollout across multiple regions at once. Expansion targets include North America, South America, Europe, Asia, and Africa, reflecting where stablecoin usage is growing fastest for payments and cross-border settlement.
The capital will also be used to scale internal infrastructure and pursue strategic acquisitions that strengthen Rain’s payments capabilities. The aim is to make stablecoin payments deployable for enterprises as quickly as traditional card programs – without the operational friction.
Rain’s latest raise highlights a broader shift in crypto investing. Capital is increasingly flowing toward companies that make blockchain invisible to the end user, embedding it into existing financial habits rather than asking users to adapt.
As stablecoins gain traction as a payments layer, firms that bridge crypto rails with established networks like Visa are emerging as critical infrastructure. Rain’s growth suggests that, for crypto’s next phase, usability may matter more than ideology.
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