Introducing LI.FI Intents
The crypto industry is at an inflection point. The technology we’ve built is now being embraced by businesses and governments that orchestrate global finance. The world is accepting the truth of better money technology through stablecoins. People are warming up to the promise of 24/7 internet-native finance and trading on blockchain rails. We stand on the cusp of mainstream adoption.
We have built the technology. We have engineered new financial primitives onchain. Now we must build the tools that enable convergence: the convergence of global finance and the onchain economy. Tools that help enterprises unlock access to digital assets with ease of integration, while still allowing for the customization required to fit every business need. This is the playbook for mainstream adoption.
To help accelerate this convergence, we’re launching LI.FI Intents: a modular, full-stack execution engine that fulfills orders through a network of professional market makers, also known as solvers, competing to provide the best execution. LI.FI Intents enables global enterprises to offer stablecoin payments, unlock access to real-world assets, and tap into compliant liquidity.
You can learn more in our docs, or get in touch with our team to start an integration conversation.
LI.FI Intents
For years, LI.FI has aggregated the full breadth of onchain liquidity: DEXs, bridges, and intent-based solutions, all through a single integration. That foundation powers 1000+ enterprise customers, including leading wallets and applications across the industry today, and continues to be the right solution for a vast range of use cases.
However, the global enterprises now arriving at the door are asking for something more specific as they bring onchain products to their customers. Payments companies want stablecoins. Institutions and neobanks want to offer users access to real world assets onchain. Regulated institutions want to launch crypto products, but need verified counterparties.
And all of these companies want to deliver these products with a UX their customers already understand: this means no gas tokens, no variable outputs, no chain specifications, none of the complexity that requires users to learn entirely new behaviors.
This is what LI.FI Intents unlocks, enabling entirely new categories of enterprise use cases to be built with LI.FI.
Three use cases we’re seeing strong demand for:

Stablecoin Payments
Stablecoins are becoming the money technology of the internet economy. Neobanks are launching their own. Commerce platforms are accepting them. Payment processors are settling in them.
But the rails beneath these flows need to behave like real payment infrastructure. LI.FI Intents delivers payments-grade execution for stablecoin flows:
Exact-output execution: When a user sends 100 USDC, the recipient receives 100 USDC or 100 USDT, with zero slippage on 1:1 stablecoin swaps.
Gasless flows: Users do not need to hold gas tokens, and in many cases do not need to manage a wallet at all. Solvers front execution on the destination chain.
Global cross-chain coverage, including non-EVM: Stablecoin flows route across all major chains, including Tron and Solana.
Market-maker-grade fills: Solvers source liquidity from their own inventory, CEX desks, and OTC counterparties, keeping spreads tight at every scale.
Access to Real World Assets
The next chapter of onchain finance is the migration of real world assets onto blockchain rails: government treasuries, equities, commodities. The instruments are coming onchain. The challenge that remains is access, fragmented across chains, issuers, and liquidity sources.
LI.FI Intents unlocks access to real world assets through a single integration:
Unified access across issuers: One API for onchain treasuries, equities, gold, and the growing universe of tokenised real world assets.
Licensed market-maker execution: Orders are filled by authorised counterparties approved to transact in permissioned RWAs.
One-click user flows: Users can buy tokenised assets in a single transaction, from any chain and any supported source token.
Compliant Liquidity
Custodians, trading desks, and regulated fintechs are actively exploring onchain products for their customers. What they cannot do is route through anonymous counterparties. AML and KYB obligations make that impossible.
Until now, the alternative has been centralised infrastructure: compliant, but slow and constrained by custody requirements.
LI.FI Intents gives institutional finance a third path: full control over solver selection, including access to KYB’d solvers. Regulated firms no longer have to choose between compliance and efficiency. They get both.
Integrator-controlled solver selection: Choose which solvers can execute your flows and restrict order flow to approved counterparties.
KYB’d solvers: The solver network includes verified legal entities, not anonymous counterparties.
OFAC screening: Checks and controls are built in to ensure only OFAC-compliant wallets can interact with your products.
Build for the Onchain Economy
Stablecoins, tokenised assets, and compliant onchain liquidity are the channels through which global finance is meeting the onchain economy. The companies building those channels, neobanks, payment platforms, exchanges, super-apps, regulated institutions, need infrastructure that meets them where they are.
That is what LI.FI Intents delivers. Whether the use case is stablecoin payments, RWAs, or compliant liquidity, LI.FI Intents can power it.
LI.FI Intents is already live across apps like Jumper and industry-leading wallets like Rabby, built on top of the infrastructure trusted by 1000+ enterprise integrations across the onchain ecosystem.
If you’re building the next generation of onchain financial products, build with LI.FI Intents.
Get Started:
Docs: LI.FI Intents Docs
Contact: Talk to the LI.FI Team
Disclaimer:
This article is only meant for informational purposes. The projects mentioned in the article are our partners, but we encourage you to do your due diligence before using or buying tokens of any protocol mentioned. This is not financial advice.

