Trading platform Interactive Brokers announced that it has added nine new tokens through zerohash and three through Paxos, while introducing stablecoin withdrawal functionality. Clients can now move USD out of their IBKR account via conversion to USDC, PYUSD (PayPal USD), or RLUSD (Ripple USD), enabling near-instant 24/7 transfers to external wallets.
The additions – including Aave, Uniswap, Lido, NEAR, and Pax Gold – extend IBKR's crypto offering to roughly 30 tradeable digital assets. More significant than the token count is what the announcement signals about how traditional brokers approach crypto at this stage of its maturity.
CEO Milan Galik said in a statement that "digital assets should be integrated into a client's broader financial experience, not treated separately."
That integration – crypto traded on the same platform as stocks, options, futures, and bonds – has been IBKR's strategy for years. The firm positions itself not as a crypto specialist but as a multi-asset broker that happens to offer crypto.
The cost structure underscores this. IBKR charges 0.12% to 0.18% per trade with a $1.75 minimum. Competitors starting to offer crypto – traditional brokers newly entering the space – charge as much as 0.75%. Even dedicated crypto exchanges are described as two to four times more expensive. The comparison matters because it positions IBKR as solving a cost problem, not a crypto adoption problem.
The stablecoin funding feature addresses a different pain point. Traditional brokers and crypto exchanges handle deposits and withdrawals through separate channels – bank transfers for the former, crypto wallets for the latter. IBKR's approach combines them. You can fund your account with a stablecoin sent directly from your wallet, begin trading across 170 global markets within minutes, and later withdraw back to that wallet via stablecoin conversion – all without navigating between systems or waiting for banking hours.
The network effect here is subtle but important. An investor who wants to allocate a portion of a diversified portfolio to crypto, or who sees a tactical opportunity in a specific token, can do so on the same platform they use for equities and options. There is no separate learning curve, no separate fees, and no separate regulatory relationship. For institutions and sophisticated retail investors who already have IBKR accounts with substantial balances, that integration reduces friction significantly.
This is not aimed at the retail trader discovering crypto for the first time. IBKR requires higher account minimums and caters to professional traders and institutional clients. But as crypto matures and allocators view it less as a speculative bet and more as a portfolio component, brokers like IBKR are positioned to capture that transition. The announcement is a small feature addition. The strategy it reflects – integrating crypto as a normal asset class on a mainstream institutional platform – is where institutional adoption may actually happen.


