KuCoin Australia’s ‘Evolution’ Showcases Regulatory Focus, Mastercard Launch

Crypto trading platform KuCoin is betting big on Australia, ramping up investment and unveiling new products designed to help consumers use digital assets for their everyday purchases.
According to the firm’s Australian Managing Director, James Pinch, KuCoin’s moves in the market are an “evolution,” building on its already established presence in the region with his appointment and the launch of a new office in Sydney’s Central Business District.
Speaking at the Australian Crypto Convention as KuCoin continued to deepen its investment in Australia, Pinch said that the country is an “exciting place to be at the moment,” with an increasingly established regulatory environment and a growing digital asset market.
As regulatory reforms take effect and AUSTRAC ramps up supervision of the virtual assets sector, KuCoin has already established itself as a market leader in regulated product space, with Pinch noting that, “you need to be nimble and adapt and make sure that your products are complying in whatever jurisdiction or set of regulation that they apply to.”
The exchange formally registered as a digital currency exchange with AUSTRAC in November 2025—enabling it to operate under formal oversight nationwide and reach a vibrant market of more than 20 million adult consumers.
“As a global platform built on trust, securing AUSTRAC registration is a key milestone in strengthening KuCoin’s global compliance architecture,” KuCoin’s CEO BC Wong said.
Australia leads the way
“Australians typically have been ahead of the curve when we start to talk about alternative investments,” Pinch said, a view buoyed up by recent research conducted by the exchange that found some 22% of Australians now hold digital assets.
KuCoin’s Australia Market Report found that funding accessibility was a “defining theme” among Australian crypto users, with prospective customers seeking compliant, trustworthy platforms that minimize friction when on-and off-ramping to and from crypto.
Figures suggest more than half use bank transfers to top up their crypto accounts, while just over 40% rely on credit and debit cards as an alternative, versus less than a third using digital wallets for funding and less than a quarter using P2P trading.
KuCoin launches KuCard in Australia
To meet the needs of Australia’s growing crypto consumer base, KuCoin has been working on ways to make crypto more accessible for real-world use.
KuCard, a new crypto-backed virtual debit card, enables users to complete crypto-backed purchases nationwide—anywhere Mastercard is accepted. The new feature also extends to Apple and Google Pay, catering to consumers who prefer making contactless payments on their smartphones. KuCard “aligns with payment habits that Australian users are already familiar with,” a spokesperson for the exchange said, offering a crypto-backed card payment experience within the card, tap-and-pay, and mobile wallet environments they “already know and trust, making it easier to use crypto beyond trading and investment.”




