Former Stripe leaders target trust layer for Europe’s B2B economy
Two senior alumni of Stripe have secured a €30 million funding round to build a new generation of secure digital passports for Europe’s fast‑growing B2B economy. The startup, whose name has not yet been publicly disclosed, aims to become the trusted identity and compliance layer that sits between businesses, banks and fintech platforms across the continent.
The founding duo, both former Stripe executives with deep experience in payments infrastructure and risk management, are building a system that allows companies to prove who they are, what they do and whether they meet regulatory requirements, using a reusable digital profile rather than endless forms and manual checks.
Building reusable digital passports for businesses
The core product is a verified, portable digital identity for companies – effectively a “digital passport” that can be shared with banks, marketplaces, SaaS tools and payment providers. Instead of repeating KYC, KYB and other onboarding checks with every new provider, a business would maintain a single, continuously updated compliance profile.
By automating document collection, ownership verification and sanctions screening, the platform promises to cut onboarding times from weeks to minutes. This is particularly attractive for cross‑border trade within the EU, where fragmented rules and legacy systems still slow down partnerships, lending and supplier onboarding.
Why investors are backing the trust infrastructure play
Investors are betting that a standardised layer of verified business data will become as critical as payments APIs were in the last decade. As regulators tighten rules on anti‑money laundering, beneficial ownership transparency and data protection, banks and platforms face rising compliance costs and operational risk.
The new venture positions itself as neutral infrastructure: it does not replace banks or fintechs, but enables them to onboard and monitor customers more efficiently while maintaining strict security and privacy controls. The founders are reportedly working closely with European regulators to ensure alignment with EU digital identity frameworks and evolving fintech regulation.
Implications for Europe’s B2B fintech landscape
If successful, the project could become a foundational layer for Europe’s digital commerce, much like Stripe transformed online payments. A common, trusted identity standard for businesses would lower barriers for startups expanding across borders, accelerate lending decisions and reduce fraud in online marketplaces.
For now, the €30 million raise underscores investor confidence that the next wave of European fintech innovation will be built not only on faster payments, but on verifiable, portable trust.

