CoinSwitch has announced the launch of DigiVault, a secure crypto custody solution designed for High-Net-Worth Individuals (HNIs), family offices, institutions, and Web3 enterprises, marking its expansion into institutional-grade infrastructure.
As India’s crypto ecosystem matures, participation is increasingly driven by institutional investors and emerging use cases such as asset tokenisation. However, the lack of robust, locally aligned custody solutions has remained a key challenge. DigiVault aims to address this gap by combining global security standards with India-focused regulatory compliance and governance frameworks.
The platform has partnered with Fireblocks to leverage advanced Multi-Party Computation (MPC) technology, enabling secure digital asset storage without single points of failure. DigiVault supports enterprise-grade features such as policy-based controls, multi-level approvals, treasury management and audit-ready processes.
For HNIs, the solution offers secure long-term storage with controlled withdrawals, while institutions benefit from enhanced governance and operational controls. Web3 developers can access custodial wallet infrastructure and APIs to build and scale applications efficiently. The platform also supports end-to-end tokenisation, allowing users to onboard, manage and distribute digital assets seamlessly.
Commenting on the launch, Ashish Singhal, Co-founder of CoinSwitch, said: “India’s crypto ecosystem is entering a more mature phase, with rising institutional participation and increasing regulatory clarity. Custody has become a foundational requirement. With DigiVault, we aim to build trusted digital asset infrastructure that supports secure, compliant and scalable adoption across HNIs, enterprises and Web3 innovators.”
DigiVault follows a compliance-first approach, adhering to FIU-IND and PMLA guidelines with strong KYC, AML and monitoring frameworks. The launch marks a strategic step toward building a full-stack crypto ecosystem spanning trading, investing and institutional custody in India.

