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Practical Operation | A Currently Viable Withdrawal Path: LemFi
During the Spring Festival holiday, many friends wanted to cash out some funds, but C2C risk control is becoming increasingly strict. There can be issues at any link—cards, accounts, or the chain. Especially recently, it’s become more obvious that returning crypto funds to China is more difficult than before.
So, in the past few days, I’ve re-evaluated the route and found a relatively clean and compliant solution that looks more secure at the moment. The LemFi route can serve as an alternative.
Let me briefly explain its positioning. LemFi itself is not a crypto product but a licensed institution for cross-border remittances, covering over 30 countries with a substantial scale. From my personal experience, it’s more like an “entry point into the banking system.” Once the money is in, it’s essentially no longer an on-chain asset but compliant fiat funds.
The core logic of this path is actually one sentence:
Convert USDT into GBP recognized by the banking system, then return to China.
The route I currently use is:
Exchange → Kraken → iFAST → LemFi → Domestic account
It looks like there’s an extra step compared to C2C, but that step is actually crucial.
The iFAST layer essentially helps you turn “money from the exchange” into bank funds under your name. When the funds enter LemFi, it only sees a normal local transfer, not crypto-related funds.
In today’s environment, this distinction is quite critical. Many issues aren’t about whether you have money but about what the money “looks like.”
The operation itself isn’t complicated: convert USDT to GBP on Kraken, withdraw to iFAST, then transfer via the UK’s local FPS to LemFi, and finally send back to Alipay or UnionPay. FPS transfers are almost instant, and the whole process is relatively smooth.
But one thing to clarify: the most vulnerable point in this route isn’t the operation but the environment.
IP, phone number, and address information must be consistent and coherent, especially for licensed institutions like LemFi, which have high requirements for “IP and identity consistency.” If this layer isn’t handled well, you’ll likely get stuck from the start.
In terms of cost, it’s not the cheapest—transaction fees and exchange rate spreads are objectively present. But if you look at it from the current stage, you’ll find that often it’s not about saving that tiny bit of cost but whether the money can be successfully landed.
My personal feeling is that the withdrawal logic is gradually changing. In the past, everyone focused on shorter routes and lower costs. Now, it’s more about whether the system can properly understand this route.
From this perspective, the “convert to fiat currency first, then go through the banking system” approach is becoming more meaningful.
To sum up in one sentence:
This route may not be the cheapest, but in the current situation, it might be a more reassuring choice.
I’ve detailed everything above. If you want to try it yourself, I recommend starting with a small amount to familiarize yourself with the process, then gradually scale up. At this stage, taking it slow is actually more stable.
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