Trust Wallet Adds Revolut Integration for Fast, Zero-Fee Crypto Buys


What Does the Revolut–Trust Wallet Integration Offer?
Trust Wallet, the self-custody wallet owned by Binance co-founder Changpeng “CZ” Zhao, has added Revolut as a direct on-ramp, giving users across Europe a new way to purchase crypto with no additional Revolut fees. The integration allows purchases of BTC, Ether and Solana begining from 10 euros and up to 23,000 euros per transaction and per day. Trust Wallet says the feature is designed to speed up access to crypto while keeping users in full control of their assets.
Revolut’s involvement adds a major neobank to Trust Wallet’s growing roster of on-ramps. The fintech giant serves more than 65 million verified users and recently received approval from the to offer crypto services across 30 European Economic Area countries under the EU’s MiCA framework.
Trust Wallet CEO Eowyn Chen said the partnership gives European users a smoother path into self-custody. “Partnering with Revolut, one of Europe’s largest neobanks with over 65 million verified users, allows Trust Wallet to offer a seamless and fee-efficient way for users to fund their wallets and access crypto,” Chen said. “For our users, it means quicker onboarding, zero extra Revolut fees, and instant access to top cryptocurrencies like BTC, ETH, SOL, USDC, and USDT, all while maintaining full control of their assets.”
Investor Takeaway
How Does This Fit Into Europe’s MiCA-Ready Market?
Revolut’s approval under MiCA in October gave the company the ability to passport crypto services across the EEA. arrives as fintechs and platforms move to align their products with the bloc’s new rulebook, which sets uniform standards for custody, liquidity, transparency and stablecoin oversight.
Trust Wallet already supports a broad range of , Mercuryo, Binance Connect, Topper, AlchemyPay, Ramp, Paybis and Swapped.com. Revolut becomes the newest addition and one of the most widely used, but the list of off-ramps remains limited to MoonPay, Mercuryo and Ramp.
For users, the Revolut link offers broader currency options. Purchases can be made in euros, British pounds, Czech koruna, Danish krone, Polish złoty and other supported fiat currencies. BTC, ETH and SOL are available from day one, with plans to add stablecoins such as USDC.
Though the crypto purchase carries no Revolut fee, loading funds into Revolut is not always free. Bank transfers, card top-ups and cash deposits may include charges. Cash deposits incur a 1.5% fee and are capped at $3,000 per month, according to Revolut’s FAQs.
Why Trust Wallet Is Looking Beyond Simple Wallet Functionality
Trust Wallet has been broadening its product stack to capture sectors growing rapidly within Web3. CZ’s backing gives the wallet visibility across centralized and decentralized markets, and recent integrations have focused on prediction markets and . The Revolut partnership extends that strategy into fiat on-ramping, an area that remains one of the largest friction points for self-custody users.
The integration’s design mirrors a broader trend in the wallet ecosystem: linking familiar mobile-banking flows to crypto without giving up private-key control. Revolut handles the fiat side, Trust Wallet handles custody, and purchases settle directly into the user’s wallet.
For Revolut, the move builds on a valuation milestone. The company recently disclosed that a private share sale pushed its valuation to $75 billion, calling itself “Europe’s most valuable private company and in the top 10 of the world’s most valuable private companies.”
Investor Takeaway
What Comes Next?
BTC, ETH and SOL form the initial launch set, but both companies say stablecoin support is next. If USDC and similar assets are added, Trust Wallet could become one of the most accessible self-custody stablecoin entry points in Europe.
The partnership arrives as self-custody adoption grows across Europe, driven by clearer rules and increased scrutiny of centralized platforms. The ability to purchase crypto directly into a private wallet without extra fees may draw more traders toward non-custodial tools ahead of MiCA’s full enforcement.







