Range, a financial infrastructure company based in Zug, Switzerland, has closed an oversubscribed $8.3 million Series A funding round. The round, which closed on June 18, 2026, brings the company’s total raised to $11 million. Range markets itself as a control layer for businesses that handle both stablecoin and fiat operations simultaneously.
Oversubscribed round draws mixed investors
The Series A was oversubscribed, meaning demand exceeded the initial target. The investor mix included traditional fintech capital alongside other backers, signaling broad appeal across different parts of the financial ecosystem. Range did not disclose a full list of investors, but the diverse base suggests interest from both legacy finance and crypto-native funds.
What Range actually does
Range’s pitch is straightforward: companies running stablecoin and fiat rails in parallel face reconciliation headaches. Range offers a control layer — essentially middleware — that sits between payment systems and ledgers. The idea is to let firms manage both types of money flows without building custom integrations or relying on spreadsheets. The company operates out of Zug, a Swiss canton known for its crypto-friendly regulations and concentration of blockchain startups.
Stablecoin usage has grown rapidly among payment firms, remittance providers, and treasury operations. Yet most of those companies still maintain fiat bank accounts and process traditional payments. Keeping the two worlds in sync is a persistent operational challenge. Range’s funding round suggests investors see a market for tools that bridge the gap — not just for crypto-native firms, but for any business that touches both currencies.
Range now has $11 million in total funding to pursue that mission. The company hasn’t announced specific product updates or hiring plans, but the new capital gives it room to expand its engineering and sales teams. With the round oversubscribed, Range’s next moves will be watched by both the fintech and stablecoin sectors.




