Revolut and Trust Wallet have rolled out a new integration that lets users in the European Union buy crypto and have it land straight in their self-custody wallet, without passing through a centralized exchange. From inside the Trust Wallet app, users can now top up balances using Revolut Pay, debit or credit cards, or bank transfers, with purchases settling instantly into their own addresses. In many cases there are no extra fees when funding with an existing Revolut balance, apart from standard network costs.
The partnership links two of the biggest names in European fintech and Web3. Trust Wallet says it serves more than 200 million users globally, while Revolut has passed 60 million customers and holds full MiCA-compliant permissions to offer crypto services across 30 EEA markets. Together they are pitching the flow as “one click” fiat to crypto, with support at launch for major assets such as bitcoin, ether, solana, USDC and USDT and purchase limits that run from about 10 euros up to 23,000 euros per transaction.
A key difference from earlier card-on-ramp models is that Revolut never holds the coins on a custodial balance sheet. Funds go directly from a user’s bank or Revolut account into their Trust Wallet, where they control the keys. The companies say this design is meant to answer long-standing complaints from European users who had to juggle multiple apps, wait for deposits to clear or accept higher fees just to move assets into self-custody.
Industry observers see the tie-up as another step in the blending of regulated banking rails with non-custodial crypto tools. With MiCA now in force and more payment providers seeking clear frameworks, partnerships like this are likely to become a template for how Europeans on-board into crypto, combining instant settlement and low fees with the control of a personal wallet instead of leaving coins on an exchange.





































































































