The crypto industry has spent over a decade building faster blockchains, cheaper transactions, and more powerful DeFi protocols. Solana does 100-millisecond finality. Ethereum processes billions in tokenised assets. Stablecoins move $33 trillion per year. The technology works.
And most people still do not trust it.
That was the uncomfortable message delivered by multiple panels at Consensus Miami 2026 this week. Executives from PayPal, Robinhood, Public.com, and other mainstream platforms all said the same thing: the biggest barrier to crypto adoption is not speed, fees, or scalability. It is trust.
“Slow down, show your work, and put users back in control,” was how one panel summed it up. The industry has been moving fast and breaking things for 15 years. The people it needs to reach next are the ones who got broken.
What Did the Panels Actually Say?
Three separate panels at Consensus arrived at the same conclusion from different directions.
The first was a fintech panel featuring executives from PayPal, Robinhood, Public.com, and 248 Ventures. They discussed why mainstream users are still reluctant to use crypto despite years of product improvements. The consensus was that complexity, poor user experience, and a lack of transparency keep regular people away. Not because the products do not work, but because people do not understand them and do not trust the companies offering them.
The second panel featured speakers who said transparency, not technology alone, drives adoption. Their argument was that crypto companies spend too much time talking about what their technology can do and not enough time showing people how it works, what happens to their money, and what protections exist if something goes wrong.
The third was a stablecoin panel where Tempo CEO Tony Romero described crypto adoption as a “barbell.” On one end, speculation drives volume. On the other end, stablecoin payments are quietly powering real-world money flows. Everything in the middle, the part where regular people use crypto for everyday financial life, remains mostly empty.
Why Don’t Regular People Trust Crypto?
The reasons are not complicated. They are obvious. And the industry has been ignoring them.
FTX collapsed and took $8 billion in customer money. The Drift hack lost $295 million. The Claude Code malware targeted 250 wallet extensions. France records a crypto kidnapping every two and a half days. Every month brings another headline about stolen funds, hacked protocols, or scam operations.
Regular people see those headlines. They do not see the technical improvements. They do not care that Solana finality went from 12 seconds to 100 milliseconds. They care that someone lost their retirement savings because they clicked the wrong link.
The CoinDesk voter survey we covered this week found that only 30% of Americans view crypto favourably. 62% do not trust the Trump administration to oversee it. When the president’s own family is making billions from crypto while writing the rules, the trust gap gets wider, not narrower.
For the industry, this is a harder problem to solve than any technical challenge. You can code faster finality. You cannot code trust.
What Does the Industry Need to Do Differently?
First, simplify the experience. Most crypto apps assume users already understand wallets, gas fees, seed phrases, and token approvals. They do not. The products that win mainstream adoption will be the ones where people never see the blockchain at all. Meta’s USDC creator payments are a good example. Creators get paid in stablecoins. They do not need to know what Solana is. They just know the money arrived faster and cheaper than a bank transfer.
Second, show what happens to people’s money. When you deposit money at a bank, you know it is insured up to a certain amount. When you deposit crypto on an exchange, most people have no idea where it goes, how it is stored, or what happens if the exchange fails. Proof of reserves helps. Insurance helps more. But the real answer is regulation that forces companies to be transparent, which is exactly what the CLARITY Act is supposed to deliver.
Third, make failure safer. When a DeFi protocol gets hacked, users often lose everything. There is no insurance. No chargeback. No customer service to call. The Drift recovery plan is a step forward, but it took five weeks to announce and will take years to fully repay. Compare that to a bank, where deposits are insured and available the next business day.
Fourth, stop celebrating volatility. The crypto community treats 10% daily swings as exciting. Regular people find them terrifying. A savings product that can lose a third of its value in a month is not appealing to someone who just wants to earn more than their bank pays. The industry needs products designed for people who hate volatility, not just people who trade it.
Is Trust Actually Improving?
Slowly. But the progress is real.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs brought crypto into regulated brokerage accounts. Coinbase has never been hacked. Tether just got its first Big Four audit started. The GENIUS Act created the first stablecoin law. Meta, PayPal, Stripe, and Visa all launched crypto products in the past year. Each of these steps makes crypto a little more familiar and a little less scary.
But trust is built in years and destroyed in seconds. Every hack, every scam, every political scandal sets the clock back. The industry can spend a year building credibility and lose it in one afternoon when a state news agency posts a missile headline and traders lose $450 million in liquidations.
The gap between what crypto can do and what regular people believe it can do is the industry’s biggest unsolved problem. Consensus Miami made that clear. The technology is ready. The people are not. And closing that gap requires something the industry has never been great at: patience, transparency, and putting users first.
What Does This Mean for the Market?
In the short term, not much. Trust is a slow-burn issue that does not move prices on a daily basis.
In the long term, it is everything. The next 100 million crypto users will not be traders and DeFi degens. They will be regular people who want to save money, get paid, and maybe earn a little interest. Those people need to trust the system before they will use it.
Every product that makes crypto simpler and safer moves the needle. Every hack and scam pushes it back. The race between the two will determine whether crypto stays a niche asset class or becomes the foundation of the global financial system.
Consensus Miami showed an industry that is finally honest about the problem. Whether it is honest enough to actually fix it is the question that defines the next decade.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.


















