Cryptocurrency has been around for more than a decade, yet its role in day-to-day business payments has remained limited. While some consumer-facing businesses accept crypto, B2B companies — the ones sending invoices, running subscriptions, and relying on recurring billing — often have few practical options. Many early crypto tools were more experimental than operational. That’s changing now.
Finunion’s B2B crypto payments platform is live and already used by early merchants. Instead of presenting crypto as a radical new system, the platform treats it as a payment method that should fit seamlessly into what businesses already do. Invoice a client, collect a payment, handle subscriptions — all without rethinking your workflow.
Simplicity Matters
Complexity is the main reason businesses hesitate to adopt crypto. Wallets, payment gateways, integrations, internal processes — setting them up takes time and expertise many teams just don’t have.
Finunion simplifies this. Businesses create invoices — one-time or recurring — right from their dashboard. The system then generates a payment link. Send it via email, chat, whatever works. Clients click, pay on a protected page, done. No extra plugins, integrations, or setup. Simple.
For businesses, the money hits the company’s crypto balance, and every invoice, payment, and transaction status is displayed in one organized interface. Finance teams get a clear view without juggling multiple tools.
Recurring Billing, Actually Practical
Recurring payments are a bigger challenge than many people realize. SaaS companies, subscription services, and digital businesses rely on predictable billing cycles. Most crypto tools simply don’t handle this well (something many companies struggle with).
Finunion’s platform fixes that. Automated recurring invoices let businesses bill clients on a schedule, track paid and unpaid invoices, and maintain visibility into cash flow — without doing it manually. Not glamorous, but essential.
It’s particularly useful for SaaS companies, digital services, and international businesses. For them, traditional cross-border payments are slow, costly, and frustrating. Crypto works, but only if the tools make operational sense. Finunion focuses squarely on that.
Bridging Crypto and Fiat
Flexibility is another strong point. Payments come into a crypto balance, but businesses don’t have to hold crypto indefinitely. They can withdraw to euro-denominated bank accounts whenever needed.
This hybrid model mirrors reality. Many businesses use crypto for payments but continue managing operations and treasury in fiat. Everything — invoices, transactions, statuses — is consolidated in one platform. No juggling, no extra reconciliation.
Built Around Actual Demand
Finunion didn’t build this platform in a vacuum. It was designed for companies already accepting crypto but lacking proper B2B infrastructure.
“There was a real gap,” Vladyslav Savchenko – the founder of Finunion – explains. “Businesses wanted a simple, reliable way to manage crypto payments. Our goal was to make crypto as manageable as traditional payments, especially for invoicing and recurring billing.”
The platform prioritizes daily business tasks over experimental features: issuing invoices, collecting payments, tracking statuses, and keeping cash flow visible. These are the real operational challenges companies face.
A Sign of a More Practical Crypto Market
Crypto adoption is entering a new phase. Infrastructure is moving from experimentation to practical tools that fit into existing business workflows. Finunion reflects that trend: crypto payments, recurring billing, invoicing, and fiat withdrawals all in one platform.
The platform is live, early merchants are already using it, and the message is clear: the next wave of crypto adoption won’t be driven by hype or speculation. It will be about tools that actually solve operational problems — the ones businesses deal with every day.


