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5 Use Cases for Persistent Crypto Deposit Addresses
Most crypto payment tools were built for one-time purchases. A customer buys something, a payment address is generated, the transaction happens, and the address is discarded. For a single checkout, that makes sense.
But what about businesses where the same client deposits crypto repeatedly? Weekly. Monthly. On-demand. In those scenarios, generating a new address for every deposit creates friction that compounds over time.
Persistent deposit addresses solve this by giving each client a single, reusable blockchain address. They save it once, deposit to it whenever they need to, and every deposit is automatically detected and attributed. No invoices. No expired addresses. No reconciliation headaches.
The idea is straightforward. The practical applications, however, vary more than you might expect. Different industries have different deposit patterns, different reconciliation needs, and different compliance requirements. What they share is the same underlying problem: a payment model built for one-time checkout being forced into a recurring deposit workflow.
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Here are five real-world use cases where persistent deposit addresses change how businesses operate.
1. Ad network advertiser funding
An ad network runs campaigns for hundreds of advertisers. Each advertiser needs to fund their account balance before campaigns go live. If the network accepts crypto, the traditional flow looks like this: advertiser requests a deposit, the network generates an invoice with a one-time address, advertiser sends funds, the network reconciles it manually.
Multiply that by 300 advertisers making weekly deposits, and you have over 1,200 invoices a month. Each one requires generating, communicating, and tracking a unique address. Support tickets pile up when addresses expire or advertisers send to the wrong one.
With persistent deposit addresses, each advertiser gets a dedicated USDC or BTC address during onboarding. They save it in their wallet and fund their ad account whenever they want. The system detects the deposit, matches it to the advertiser, and credits their balance automatically.
The operational impact is significant. Deposit-related support tickets drop because advertisers stop asking “where do I send my deposit?” Fund availability speeds up because there’s no manual step between deposit and crediting. And the finance team gets a clean per-advertiser deposit record instead of a spreadsheet full of one-time addresses.
For crypto-native ad networks serving 100 or more active advertisers, the difference between invoice-per-deposit and persistent addresses is the difference between a part-time support job and a fully automated flow.
2. Trading platform and OTC desk client deposits
Trading platforms and OTC desks handle deposits from clients who trade regularly. Each client may deposit multiple times per week, and every deposit needs to be attributed to the correct account. For compliance purposes, the platform also needs a complete deposit history per client.

With one-time addresses, this means mapping each address back to the client who used it. Over months of trading, a single active client might have hundreds of deposit addresses tied to their account. Reconciliation becomes time-consuming, and building a regulatory-ready audit trail per client requires stitching together fragmented records.
A persistent deposit address changes the equation entirely. One address per trader. Every deposit lands on that address and is automatically attributed. The compliance team gets a chronological deposit report per client, on demand, without any manual reconstruction.
For platforms operating in regulated markets, this also simplifies AML monitoring. Deposit patterns per client are visible in one place. Anomalies stand out against a clear baseline instead of hiding in a pile of unrelated addresses.
On top of that, when regulators or auditors ask for a complete deposit record for a specific client, the answer is a single export. Not a reconstruction project.
3. Marketplace buyer and seller deposits
Digital goods marketplaces, freelancer platforms, and peer-to-peer service platforms all share a common pattern: multiple participants deposit funds into the platform’s ecosystem. Buyers add funds to purchase services. Sellers receive payouts after completing work. Sometimes both sides deposit.
When each deposit requires a new address, the marketplace has to track which address belongs to which participant, which transaction corresponds to which purchase, and who hasn’t been credited yet. With dozens or hundreds of active users, this attribution problem grows quickly.
Persistent addresses simplify the model. Each participant gets a deposit address tied to their account. Buyers can pre-fund their marketplace balance at any time by sending crypto to their assigned address. The platform detects the deposit and updates the balance. No checkout flow needed for each individual top-up.
The result is a smoother experience for participants and a cleaner back-end for the marketplace. Multi-party attribution becomes automatic. Repeat buyers top up more frequently when the process takes one step instead of five.
For marketplaces handling both buyer deposits and seller payouts, persistent addresses on the deposit side pair well with crypto payout rails on the other. The entire flow stays on one platform, and the financial records for both sides are structured and exportable.
4. Proxy, VPN, and hosting service top-ups
This vertical has a unique relationship with crypto payments. For proxy services, VPN providers, and hosting companies, crypto can account for a significant share of total revenue. These are services with prepaid balance models, and their customers top up frequently.

A power user of a proxy service might top up their balance every week. Under the invoice-per-deposit model, that means a new checkout flow every time. A new address, a new confirmation page, a new reconciliation entry. For the type of user who’s already comfortable with crypto, this feels unnecessarily heavy.
A persistent deposit address removes that friction. The customer saves their BTC or USDC address, bookmarks it, and sends funds whenever their balance runs low. The entire interaction happens on the blockchain. A direct deposit to a known address, nothing else required.
For the provider, the impact shows up in retention and revenue. When the top-up process is frictionless, customers top up more frequently and in smaller amounts rather than waiting until their balance is empty. The result is smoother cash flow and fewer lapsed accounts.
CoinGate already works with businesses in this space. Companies like NordVPN, IPRoyal, and ProxyScrape process crypto payments through the platform. Payment channels extend that relationship to include persistent deposit addresses for their customers.
5. SaaS and enterprise crypto billing
Enterprise SaaS billing has its own set of complications. Contracts are quarterly or annual. Payments are large. And if the enterprise client wants to pay in crypto, the typical flow involves back-and-forth communication to generate and share a payment address for each billing cycle.
That friction might seem minor when you’re handling five enterprise clients. At fifty, it starts consuming real time. Each payment cycle requires generating an invoice, sending the address, confirming receipt, and reconciling. Finance teams on both sides spend time on steps that could be eliminated.
With a persistent deposit address, the SaaS provider assigns each enterprise client an address during contract setup. Every billing cycle, the client sends their payment to the same address. The provider’s system detects it and records it against the correct account.
This is especially useful for cross-border enterprise payments, where traditional wire transfers involve correspondent banks, intermediary fees, and settlement delays. A persistent crypto deposit address turns a multi-day, multi-step process into a single transaction that settles the same day.
The finance teams on both sides benefit. The SaaS provider has clean per-client deposit records for revenue recognition. The enterprise client has a consistent address they can configure in their accounts payable system once and reuse indefinitely.
The common thread
These five use cases span different industries, business models, and transaction volumes. But they share the same underlying pattern: a business with clients who deposit crypto more than once.

And the list doesn’t end here. Any business model built around recurring client deposits can benefit from persistent addresses. Subscription platforms, donation portals, membership services, escrow providers. The pattern is the same wherever the same client sends crypto to the same business repeatedly.
In every case, the invoice-per-deposit model adds friction that doesn’t need to exist. Persistent deposit addresses remove it. One address per client. Automatic detection and attribution. Clean audit trails. And a deposit experience that doesn’t require the client to ask for a new address every time.
CoinGate payment channels provide this infrastructure on a regulated, compliance-ready platform with MiCA licensing, AML screening on every deposit, Travel Rule compliance, and full audit trails built in. Whether you’re running an ad network, a trading platform, a marketplace, a hosting service, or a SaaS business, the underlying deposit problem is the same. The solution is, too.
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Accept crypto with CoinGate
Accept crypto with confidence using everything you need in one platform.