You have a crypto deal — or a crypto thesis — and you want to pool capital from other investors to act on it. The first question you'll face isn't "which token?" or "which chain?" It's a structural one: do you set up a crypto fund or a crypto SPV?
These two vehicles look similar on the surface — both pool investor capital, both involve a manager making decisions, both need compliance and legal infrastructure. But they serve fundamentally different purposes, carry different regulatory profiles, and are optimized for different use cases.
Get this decision wrong and you'll either over-engineer a simple deal with unnecessary fund overhead, or under-build a multi-deal strategy with a structure that can't scale. This guide breaks it down clearly so you can make the right call before you spend a dollar on formation.
The Core Difference: One Deal vs. Many Deals
Before diving into structure, compliance, and costs, start here:
A crypto SPV is built for a single investment. One token, one deal, one underlying asset. You pool capital from multiple investors into a clean legal entity, deploy it into that specific opportunity, and when the investment exits or distributions flow, the SPV winds down.
A crypto fund is built for a portfolio of investments. It has a mandate, an investment period, and the ability to deploy across multiple tokens, projects, or assets over time. LPs commit capital upfront and the GP deploys it deal by deal across the fund's life.
Everything else — fee structure, regulatory treatment, formation complexity, LP experience, and ongoing administration — flows from this single distinction.
What Is a Crypto SPV?
A crypto Special Purpose Vehicle is a legal entity — typically a Delaware LLC — created to hold a single crypto investment on behalf of multiple investors. It functions as a "legal wrapper" that consolidates a group of investors into one entity on the cap table or token registry of the underlying deal.
Common use cases for crypto SPVs:
Pooling into a single token presale or private round (e.g., a Series A token round for a DeFi protocol)
Co-investing alongside a lead into a Web3 startup that's raising equity or a SAFE
Aggregating investor capital for an IEO or private token allocation before public listing
Accessing an oversubscribed round where the project wants one consolidated entry on their cap table rather than 20 individual wallets
Syndicating a specific NFT collection or digital asset with other accredited investors
From a legal structure standpoint, a crypto SPV works the same way as any other SPV: investors purchase membership interests in the LLC, the LLC holds the underlying crypto asset or token allocation, and distributions flow through the entity when tokens unlock, vest, or are sold.
The key operational differences from a traditional equity SPV are in custody and banking. A crypto SPV needs either a dedicated crypto wallet setup or an integration with a qualified custodian — something that adds complexity and cost to the formation process. A crypto or token SPV typically runs $22,000 to $28,000 in total setup costs once wallet setup, compliance, and operational requirements are factored in.
What Is a Crypto Fund?
A crypto fund is a pooled investment vehicle with a mandate to invest across multiple crypto assets, projects, or tokens over a defined period. It is a permanent structure with an investment thesis, formal LP commitments, a management company, and a fund lifecycle — not a one-deal vehicle.
There are three main types of crypto funds in 2026:
1. Crypto Venture Fund Invests in early-stage blockchain startups, protocols, and Web3 projects — typically taking equity, token warrants, SAFEs, or token allocation rights. Check sizes range from $100K to $2M+ depending on fund size. Investment horizon is 7–10 years, with liquidity driven by token unlocks, acquisitions, or protocol exits. Pantera Capital, Multicoin Capital, and Polychain are examples at the institutional end of this category.
2. Crypto Hedge Fund Actively trades liquid crypto assets — Bitcoin, Ethereum, altcoins, DeFi tokens — using strategies such as long/short, market-neutral, arbitrage, and systematic/quantitative approaches. Crypto hedge funds differ from VC funds in that they focus on liquid assets and generate returns through active management rather than illiquid early-stage investment. Fee structures typically follow the traditional 2-and-20 model, though competition has driven some funds toward 1.5% management fee structures.
3. Hybrid Crypto Fund Combines liquid trading strategies with venture-style token and equity investments. Common for managers with both a trading desk and a deal sourcing operation who want a single vehicle for LP capital.
For most emerging managers reading this guide, the relevant comparison is between a crypto venture fund (multi-deal, long-horizon) and a crypto SPV (single-deal, discrete exit). That's the comparison we'll focus on.
Crypto SPV vs. Crypto Fund: Side-by-Side Comparison
Feature | Crypto SPV | Crypto Fund |
|---|---|---|
Investment Scope | Single token, deal, or asset | Multiple tokens/deals over time |
Structure | Delaware LLC | Delaware LP + GP LLC (or offshore) |
Fund Life | Deal-specific (months to ~3 years) | 7–10 years |
LP Commitment | Per-deal, one-time | Upfront commitment to the full fund |
Management Fee | Typically none or one-time setup fee | 2% annually on committed capital |
Carried Interest | 10–20% (varies by deal) | 20% standard |
Crypto Custody | Wallet/custodian setup per deal | Centralized custodian across portfolio |
Regulatory Filing | Form D (Reg D) | Form D + ERA/RIA status |
KYC/AML | Per investor, per SPV | Per investor at fund close |
Setup Complexity | Moderate | Higher |
Ongoing Admin | Low (deal-specific) | Significant (portfolio-wide) |
Ideal For | One great deal, quick execution | Repeat investing, portfolio thesis |
Typical Cost | $22K–$28K | Higher (formation + annual admin) |
When to Choose a Crypto SPV
A crypto SPV is the right vehicle when:
You have a specific deal in front of you right now. There's a token round closing in three weeks. You have allocation rights. You want to bring in 10–15 co-investors but don't have a fund in place. An SPV gets you from "I have a deal" to "I have a structure" faster than any other vehicle.
You're testing a thesis before committing to a fund. Running a few SPVs is the smartest way to build a crypto investment track record before you raise a formal fund. Each SPV is a discrete proof point — deal sourcing, diligence, terms negotiation, LP management, token custody, and distribution. Do three or four well, and you have a real track record to show Fund I LPs.
You're a syndicate lead or angel who doesn't want ongoing management obligations. A fund is a 10-year commitment. An SPV closes when the deal exits. If you're investing opportunistically rather than running a systematic strategy, SPVs give you the flexibility to participate when you see a great deal without taking on the overhead of a permanent fund structure.
Your investors want deal-by-deal visibility. Some LPs prefer the transparency of knowing exactly what they're invested in, rather than relying on a manager's diversified portfolio construction. A crypto SPV gives them direct line-of-sight into a single asset and its performance.
The deal involves a token with a defined unlock schedule. Token-based investments often have predictable liquidity events — cliff periods, linear vesting over 12–36 months, TGE (Token Generation Events). An SPV maps cleanly onto these timelines. There's no ambiguity about when the vehicle winds down.
When to Choose a Crypto Fund
A crypto fund is the right structure when:
You have a repeatable deal sourcing engine. If you're consistently seeing high-quality crypto deals — because of your network in a specific ecosystem, your technical credibility, your LP relationships with protocol teams — you need a fund. Running each deal as a separate SPV becomes operationally inefficient, confusing for LPs, and limits your ability to write meaningful follow-on checks.
You want to build an institutional-grade investment management business. A fund with a mandate, a management company, proper LP reporting, and a defined track record is how you build toward Fund II, Fund III, and institutional LP relationships. SPVs are tactics; funds are strategy.
Your LP base prefers a committed capital structure. Family offices, endowments, and institutional allocators generally prefer committing to a fund with a defined mandate over evaluating deals one at a time. A fund also lets LPs participate in your full portfolio — not just the deals they individually happened to say yes to.
You need the economics to work at scale. SPVs charge setup fees per deal. A fund amortizes formation costs across all investments over its life. If you're planning to do 15–20 investments over 3–4 years, a fund is materially more cost-effective than running 15–20 separate SPVs.
You're running a crypto hedge fund or active trading strategy. Active liquid trading cannot operate through SPVs — you need a fund structure with proper NAV calculation, redemption mechanics, a qualified custodian, and prime brokerage relationships. There is no SPV equivalent for a liquid trading strategy.
The Regulatory Landscape for Crypto Funds and SPVs in 2026
The regulatory environment for crypto fund managers has changed materially in the past 18 months, and understanding the current framework is essential before you choose a structure.
The SEC's Token Taxonomy (January 2026)
In January 2026, the SEC issued a formal statement establishing a basic taxonomy for tokenized securities — classifying crypto assets as digital commodities, digital collectibles, digital tools, stablecoins, or digital securities depending on their characteristics. This matters because the classification of the assets in your portfolio or SPV determines the regulatory framework that applies to you.
If your SPV or fund holds digital securities (tokens that meet the Howey test for investment contracts), you're operating in the securities framework — Reg D applies, investors must be accredited, and Form D must be filed. Most early-stage token investments and token warrants fall into this category.
If your portfolio consists primarily of digital commodities (Bitcoin, Ethereum, and certain others under the new taxonomy), a different regulatory framework applies under CFTC jurisdiction, with implications for how you register and report.
2026 AML/KYC Requirements
Starting January 1, 2026, both SEC-registered investment advisers and Exempt Reporting Advisers are subject to formal AML program requirements under updated FinCEN rules. This applies regardless of whether you're running a fund or an SPV — every investor must be KYC-verified before capital is accepted. This is not optional and cannot be handled informally.
Allocations has KYC/AML built directly into the investor onboarding flow for both SPVs and fund structures — every LP is verified automatically through the white-labeled portal, with documentation retained for compliance purposes.
Reg D: 506(b) vs. 506(c)
Both crypto SPVs and crypto funds raise from accredited investors under Regulation D. The choice between 506(b) (no general solicitation, pre-existing relationships) and 506(c) (general solicitation permitted, mandatory accreditation verification) affects how you can market your deal or fund. Most private crypto SPVs use 506(b). Managers who want to raise publicly or through online channels use 506(c).
Custody
Crypto custody is one of the most operationally complex aspects of running a crypto fund or SPV. Institutional-grade options include Coinbase Custody, Anchorage Digital, Fireblocks, and BitGo. The SEC's December 2025 guidance clarified how broker-dealers can custody digital asset securities, which expanded the institutional custody infrastructure available to fund managers.
For crypto SPVs, Allocations supports wallet setup and crypto-native custody arrangements as part of the formation process — a significant operational advantage over building this infrastructure independently.
The "SPV Ladder" Strategy: Building Toward a Fund
One of the most effective strategies for an emerging crypto manager is to use SPVs as a runway to a formal fund.
Here's how it works:
Year 1–2: Run 3–5 crypto SPVs. Each one is a discrete deal — a token private round, a Web3 equity co-investment, a pre-TGE allocation. Use Allocations to form each SPV quickly, onboard LPs professionally, and handle custody and compliance properly. Build a network of LPs who trust your deal sourcing and diligence.
Year 2–3: Compile your SPV track record — cost basis, current valuations, distributions, unrealized returns. This is your Fund I pitch deck. You have proof that you see good deals, that your LPs trust you with capital, and that you can operationally run a vehicle from formation to exit.
Year 3+: Raise Fund I as a formal crypto venture fund on Allocations. Your LP network is already warm — they've invested with you before. Your track record is documented. Your infrastructure is already in place.
This approach dramatically reduces the risk of Fund I fundraising. LPs are far more likely to commit to a manager with three proven SPV exits than to a first-time fund with no track record at all.
Crypto SPV and Fund Costs on Allocations
Allocations supports both crypto SPVs and crypto fund formation, with pricing that reflects the true operational complexity of crypto-native structures.
Crypto SPV: $22,000–$28,000 in total costs, covering entity formation, wallet/custody setup, KYC/AML onboarding, compliance filings, and fund administration through the deal lifecycle.
Crypto Fund: Pricing scales with fund complexity — fund size, number of LPs, asset types, and whether an offshore structure (Cayman, BVI) is needed. Formation costs are amortized across all investments made over the fund's life, making the per-deal economics significantly more favorable than running individual SPVs at the same scale.
In both cases, Allocations provides:
Entity formation (Delaware LLC for SPVs, Delaware LP + GP LLC for funds)
White-labeled investor portal under your brand
Built-in KYC/AML for every LP
Integrated banking and crypto wallet setup
Form D filing support
Ongoing fund administration, LP statements, and K-1s
Making the Decision: A Simple Framework
Use this framework to choose between a crypto SPV and a crypto fund:
Start with an SPV if:
You have one specific deal to execute right now
You don't yet have a formal LP network or fund track record
You want to test your thesis before committing to a 10-year fund structure
Your investors want deal-by-deal control and visibility
The asset has a defined token unlock or liquidity timeline
Start with a fund if:
You have a repeatable deal sourcing strategy across multiple deals
You want to build an investment management business, not just do deals
Your LP base includes institutional or family office investors who prefer fund structures
You're running an active liquid trading strategy
You're planning 10+ investments over the next 3–4 years
When in doubt, start with SPVs. The infrastructure is lighter, the commitment is smaller, and the track record you build is real. The best time to raise a crypto fund is after you've proven you can source and execute deals — not before.
The Bottom Line
Crypto fund or crypto SPV — the right answer depends entirely on what you're trying to build.
If you have a deal today and investors who want in, an SPV is the fastest, cleanest, most cost-effective way to execute it properly. If you have a portfolio thesis and a repeatable edge in finding great crypto opportunities, a fund is how you build a durable investment management business.
Allocations supports both — with crypto-native infrastructure that handles the custody complexity, compliance requirements, and investor onboarding that make crypto structures fundamentally different from traditional equity vehicles.
Ready to launch your crypto SPV or fund? Allocations gives you formation, KYC/AML, crypto wallet setup, and fund admin in one platform — built for the realities of digital asset investing.
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