Notabene is a crypto compliance and payments infrastructure provider, and this weekly summary highlights several developments that underscore its growing role in regulated digital-asset markets. The company’s latest data shows virtual asset service providers increasingly enforcing Travel Rule requirements by blocking or reversing transactions lacking mandated information, turning non-compliance into a direct business risk.
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Between 2024 and 2025, the share of VASPs blocking withdrawals without Travel Rule data rose from 2.9% to 15.4%, with nearly one in five returning funds when originators fail to respond. This shift suggests rising demand for robust compliance tooling, as platforms that cannot meet counterpart expectations may face reduced transaction volumes, higher friction, and potential reputational damage.
Regulatory change in Australia is a key driver of this trend, with updated AML/CTF rules for crypto-to-crypto exchanges, custodial wallet providers, and other VASPs now in force under AUSTRAC. Implementation of the Travel Rule for virtual asset transfers has been deferred to July 1, 2026, and Notabene is positioning itself as a partner by offering a mapped framework and guidance to help firms meet the deadline.
These reforms are expected to increase compliance costs but may reduce regulatory uncertainty and encourage consolidation toward better-capitalized, sophisticated providers. For Notabene, growing regulatory clarity in Australia and other markets could translate into higher adoption of its Travel Rule and AML solutions, reinforcing its role as infrastructure rather than discretionary tooling.
Notabene is also extending its reach into stablecoin payments as a founding design partner for The Better Money Company, which is building a stablecoin clearinghouse aimed at reducing fragmentation across coins, blockchains, and platforms. The initiative seeks to make supported stablecoins effectively interchangeable at a one-dollar value across participating venues, targeting more seamless institutional usage.
Within this clearinghouse, Notabene is providing a pre-transaction compliance and authorization layer to verify and approve payments before settlement. Embedding its technology at this level could deepen its integration into payment flows, increase transaction exposure, and strengthen its value proposition to institutions seeking compliant stablecoin rails.
The collaboration is framed as part of a broader “stablecoin stack” that combines clearing, compliance, and open protocols to support digital-native money use cases. If the clearinghouse model and associated infrastructure gain adoption, Notabene could benefit from recurring revenue tied to transaction screening and network-level regulatory requirements.
Taken together, the week’s updates point to Notabene consolidating its position at the intersection of crypto regulation and payments infrastructure. Rising Travel Rule enforcement, evolving AML/CTF regimes, and new stablecoin initiatives all appear to support long-term demand for the company’s compliance-centric technology stack.

