OwlTing Group said it has taken a major step in scaling its digital payments business after signing more than 20 enterprise clients for its OwlPay Harbor platform in the first quarter of 2026. The new customers — spanning fintechs, remittance operators, nonprofits and cross-border B2B payment services — together represent in excess of $5 billion in annual payment volume, the company said, underscoring rapid commercial uptake of its regulated digital currency settlement infrastructure.
The client wins mark what OwlTing described as a “critical phase” in its transformation into a fully operational monetization entity. OwlPay Harbor is positioned as a settlement layer that uses regulated digital currencies to move value across borders; the Q1 additions broaden the platform’s addressable market by bringing on partners that operate in high-demand payment corridors and verticals where speed and cost of settlement are commercial priorities.
OwlTing highlighted geographic diversity among the new clients, naming Latin America, Africa, the Middle East and the Asia-Pacific as primary regions of focus. Those markets are frequently cited by the payments industry as areas with heavy remittance flows and growing demand for affordable, fast cross-border payment rails — characteristics that typically attract fintechs and B2B payment specialists seeking alternatives to legacy correspondent banking systems.
While the company did not disclose individual client names or the precise commercial terms, the cited $5 billion-plus in annual payment volume provides a gauge of scale for the platform’s burgeoning customer base. For a payments platform at this stage, onboarding enterprise customers with large transaction volumes is often a prerequisite for achieving sustainable revenue and validating product-market fit, particularly when deploying regulated digital currency settlement that must meet compliance and liquidity requirements.
The announcement arrives as interest in digital currency-enabled payment solutions remains high globally, driven by corporates and payment providers looking to lower cross-border costs and shorten settlement windows. OwlTing’s emphasis on a regulated settlement model signals an attempt to position OwlPay Harbor as a compliant alternative to less-regulated crypto rails, an approach that observers say can be critical to winning institutional and remittance-sector business.
OwlTing will now face the task of converting volume into recurring monetization and demonstrating operational resilience across multiple jurisdictions. Investors and industry watchers will likely look for further disclosures on revenue generation, regulatory approvals in target markets, and any partnerships with local financial institutions that enable on- and off-ramps for fiat currency movement. For now, the Q1 client haul establishes OwlPay Harbor as an emerging player in a competitive field of digital payment infrastructure providers.
