Three products, built for the three places crypto risk actually sits — the user making the trade, the platform holding the assets, and the directors running the business. Every policy is written specifically for digital finance. Nothing is re‑packaged from traditional insurance.
Cryp-Sure EI — Embedded Insurance
Blanket cover for every user on a participating exchange. Automatic, invisible, and already running.
Cryp-Sure EI is insurance that lives inside the exchange, not alongside it. When a user trades or deposits on a participating platform, coverage applies in the background — no enrolment, no quote flow, no separate login. It’s a trust layer built directly into the trading experience.
The product is underwritten for the four risks that matter most to retail and professional crypto users:
- Trade execution protection. Cover if trades are delayed, fail, or execute incorrectly.
- Theft and hacking. Cover if funds are stolen or misdirected during trading — including wallet-level compromises.
- Loss of funds. Cover for user assets lost through exchange errors or operational failures.
- Platform and operational failures. Cover for losses arising from system errors or platform-level incidents.
Claims are processed automatically. The underwriting engine is integrated with the exchange’s own transaction data, which means incidents are detected, validated, and — where the policy responds — settled by smart contract. Users see cover apply in seconds, not weeks. For the exchange, integration is a lightweight engineering job rather than a heavy IT programme.
For platforms, that turns protection into a retention and acquisition tool. Trading on a Cryp-Sure-insured venue is materially safer than trading on one that isn’t — and the evidence is visible to the user every time they transact.
Cryp-Sure Company — MiCAR-Grade Cover
The insurance spine a Crypto-Asset Service Provider needs to meet prudential requirements — and to prove, to a regulator, that it has.
Under MiCAR and equivalent frameworks, a CASP cannot operate without meeting specific prudential and conduct requirements. Cryp-Sure Company is built as a single package policy that satisfies those requirements and extends naturally into the rest of a platform’s business risk. It’s the core compliance document and the operational safety net in one contract.
The core policy covers:
- Client asset protection. Losses of client funds or crypto-assets caused by operational errors or system failures.
- Professional indemnity. Claims of negligence, errors, or breach of duty in the provision of your services.
- Cyber risk. Data breaches, system compromises, and technology failures affecting clients.
- Regulatory and compliance costs. Defence and investigation costs arising from MiCAR — and other crypto-specific — regulatory inquiries.
Around that core, the package extends to cover the full operational surface of a digital-asset business: property, employers’ liability, public liability, group personal accident, and a set of crypto-specific enhancements for custody governance, tokenisation, and stablecoin reserve management. Each extension is written for digital-asset risk specifically — not adapted from an off-the-shelf commercial policy.
The result is a single, regulator-ready contract that makes compliance simpler, frees up capital, and scales with the business as it grows into new jurisdictions.
Cryp-Sure D&O — Directors and Officers
Personal protection for the people running a crypto exchange — written specifically for the risks directors actually face in this industry.
D&O is not about protecting the company. It’s about protecting the individuals on the board and in the executive team when they are personally named in a claim arising from how the business was run. For a cryptocurrency exchange, that exposure is structurally higher than in traditional finance — and generic D&O wordings frequently exclude, sub-limit, or simply don’t contemplate the specific events crypto directors face.
Core cover:
- Wrongful act claims arising from management or stewardship of the exchange.
- Limits preserved for crypto-specific regulatory claims — not absorbed by other matters.
- Crisis management and preventative PR to reduce reputational exposure before a claim crystallises.
- Civil fines and penalties against insured persons, where insurable by law.
Policy limits are available up to €20m. Tailored extensions address the exposures that actually sit on a crypto director’s desk: initial coin and token offerings, hot-wallet custody governance, stablecoin liquidity and reserve management, non-executive director limits for non-indemnifiable losses, outside directorship cover, unlimited lifetime cover for retired directors, and tax liability cover in company insolvency scenarios.
When an incident strikes, the policy responds immediately: defence costs are advanced, crypto-specialist counsel is appointed, and the forensic, regulatory, and PR specialists who actually understand the industry are engaged on the director’s behalf. Settlements can be reached without admissions of liability. The point is that executives can focus on resolving the incident rather than on whether they’re personally exposed while doing it.
Apply for D&O cover → · Read the full D&O product sheet (PDF)
Why these three, and nothing else
A crypto exchange doesn’t need a buffet of insurance products. It needs the three that, between them, cover the user, the platform, and the people running it — written by people who understand the industry, underwritten on data the industry actually produces, and settled through infrastructure the industry already uses.
That’s the whole of the Cryp-Sure offer. The underwriting engine, the claims flow, and the settlement rails are built. Integration with an exchange is a lightweight engineering engagement, not a twelve-month programme. And the policies themselves are not adapted from traditional lines — they were drafted for digital finance from day one.
See it running, or book the team
The product is live today. You can walk through the claims flow, the exchange console, and the commercial portal without a sales call — or if you’d rather talk, we’ll put thirty minutes on the calendar.