Use Cases
Bermuda is designed as infrastructure — a privacy layer that any application, protocol, or service can integrate. Whether you are building consumer products or institutional tooling, Bermuda provides the primitives to make on-chain activity private and compliant.
Example Integrators
| Segment | How Bermuda helps |
|---|---|
| Wallets | Offer users private accounts, shielded balances, and confidential transfers as a native feature |
| Stablecoin issuers | Enable private stablecoin transfers and compliant settlement without exposing user balances |
| Neobanks | Power private on-chain savings, payments, and treasury management for fintech products |
| L1s and L2s | Add a privacy layer to any EVM chain — deploy Bermuda as modular infrastructure |
| Payroll providers | Process salary and contractor payments on-chain without revealing compensation details |
| Asset managers | Manage funds, rebalance portfolios, and execute strategies without public exposure |
| On/off ramps | Shield funds at the point of entry and unshield at exit — keeping the flow between private |
| Crypto credit cards | Enable private spend transactions backed by shielded on-chain balances |
| Payment providers | Process on-chain payments privately — senders, recipients, and amounts stay confidential |
| Subscriptions | Make recurring on-chain payments confidential — subscribers and amounts stay private |
| AI agents | Build autonomous agents that transact privately using private x402 payments |
Beyond
The examples above represent common integration patterns, but Bermuda is not limited to these categories. Because the protocol can shield any on-chain transaction flow, any application that moves value on an EVM chain can add privacy — from DAO treasuries and token vesting contracts to decentralized identity systems and cross-chain bridges. If it runs on EVM, Bermuda can make it private.