A US user sent $25 directly to Elon Musk on Thursday to test X Money’s peer-to-peer feature. Musk confirmed the payment publicly on X as the platform officially launched its full payments service for US Premium subscribers.
X Money’s digital wallet enables real-time peer-to-peer transfers, bank account deposits, and US dollar balance storage. Subscribers also receive a physical metal Visa debit card for everyday spending at any Visa-accepting merchant.
X Money Goes Live With P2P Payments
The launch marks the end of a months-long beta period for X’s integrated financial system. The service initially covers Premium and Premium+ subscribers, with a wider expansion expected to follow. Earlier in the year, Musk already signaled X Money’s arrival, placing it at the center of his broader app ambitions.
Users can send money to any X account, link external bank accounts, and hold dollar balances inside the app. The Visa debit card ships to subscribers and displays their X handle as the card identifier.
Musk Gets a Coffee
An X user put the feature to an immediate test by sending $25 to the world’s richest person. Musk confirmed receipt in a brief public reply.
The exchange gave X Money’s P2P transfers a public proof of concept within hours of the official launch. Musk has separately revealed crypto integration plans for X Money, and Thursday’s fiat-first release does not rule out future digital assets. X’s XChat also topped the App Store at launch, showing the platform’s consistent ability to turn new product releases into rapid adoption.
40 States Licensed and $10 Million in FDIC Coverage
X holds money transmitter licenses in more than 40 US states, meeting the primary legal requirement for processing domestic payments. However, X still awaits approval in the remaining states.
Deposits inside X Money receive Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) coverage through a cash sweep program. The program spreads user balances across multiple partner banks, raising the insured ceiling to $10 million per user. Standard single-bank FDIC limits cap at $250,000, so the sweep structure offers significantly broader protection.
For context, PayPal and Venmo do not offer FDIC insurance on stored balances. That leaves users exposed if a platform becomes insolvent. X Money’s sweep arrangement puts it closer to a full banking product than a simple payments app.
X enters a market where PayPal, Venmo, and Cash App hold dominant positions among fintech platforms in 2026. Nevertheless, X Cashtags drove $1 billion in global trading volume soon after their debut. That result shows the platform can convert social engagement into financial transactions at scale.
X Money’s adoption curve depends on how fast the service moves past its initial Premium subscriber base. Crypto communities have tracked every X payment development closely, and the full launch gives them fresh reason to watch for a future digital asset expansion.
The post X Money Goes Live as User Sends $25 Directly to Elon Musk appeared first on BeInCrypto.

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