States page

The licensing signal is real. The live consumer state map is not public yet.

The most cited public state-level signal is that X had money transmitter licenses in 41 states and Washington, D.C. according to TechCrunch on January 28, 2025. That matters, but it is not the same thing as a published consumer map showing where X Money is fully live.

Published: March 11, 2026 Last checked: March 11, 2026 Current posture: reported, not fully public

What this page can honestly say

Licensing is not the same thing as live consumer access

  • Licensing footprint: evidence that X Payments is structurally serious.
  • Live state map: still missing from the public consumer product story.
  • Best use of this page: explain the gap now and expand into state-by-state landing pages later.

What to track by state once docs appear

Signup availability

Can a new user in that state open and fund an account?

Transfer rails

Does the state support both wallet funding and bank withdrawal?

Instant transfer rules

Are instant cash-out or instant funding options universally available?

Limits and holds

Do transfer caps or settlement times differ by state or partner bank setup?

State pages now live

The first state cluster is now online

California

Track whether California has any public first-party X Money availability signal yet.

Open the California page

Texas

Track the Texas rollout question without overstating what public sources confirm.

Open the Texas page

Florida

Track Florida-specific availability intent while the broader public map remains incomplete.

Open the Florida page

New York

Track the New York question, where users often expect tighter rollout scrutiny.

Open the New York page

Illinois

Track Illinois-specific coverage and whether public docs ever name the state directly.

Open the Illinois page

Pennsylvania

Track Pennsylvania as a practical East Coast rollout check while public detail is still thin.

Open the Pennsylvania page

Countries overview

See why country intent should stay as a single hub page until public geography expands beyond the U.S.

Open the countries page