Pi Network has launched a new Fast Track KYC feature, allowing new Pioneers to activate a Mainnet wallet without waiting through the 30 mining sessions once required. This update is powered by a deeper integration of AI into the KYC process and is designed to give both new users and non-users the chance to engage with the Pi ecosystem sooner.
Previously, the 30-session rule acted as a natural barrier that slowed participation. With the new pathway, identity checks can be carried out earlier, giving users direct access to Mainnet wallets. The option appears inside the Pi Wallet app for those eligible, streamlining the process while preserving security and compliance standards.
Following verification, users are treated to auto-enablement of wallets, therefore gaining access to Pi apps, ecosystem events, and local commerce. That does not, however, enable full Mainnet migration. Mined balances become transferable only after reaching 30 sessions and the broader Mainnet Checklist, including the normal KYC process.
Significantly, Fast Track KYC is a native solution, i.e., Pi is handling it internally and not via third-party vendors. So far, third-party partners like Banxa were among the limited access points for Pioneers. Pi has now devised its own secure solution, giving wider access and a wider set of verified users for the developers to operate upon.
The network has also indicated that Fast Track KYC is by no means guaranteed to be approved quickly. Requests will be declined even if they don’t qualify to the same standard as regular KYC. Wherever it is possible, through its auto verification, the system can even employ higher parameters.
Pi’s verification of identity approach is therefore consistent with its own long-term objective of creating a blockchain through actual and tried users.
More than 14.82 million Pioneers successfully migrated with the approval of KYC, demonstrating scale and compliance. Adding Fast Track KYC to the mix is yet another boost to that momentum by widening access without compromising migration standards.
This development is also in step with a broader industry trend. Identity-related blockchain standards that are verifiably participating, such as ERC-3643, are becoming the foundation of how digital ecosystems evolve. By putting these processes at the front and center of its network early, Pi Network is preparing itself ahead of changes in regulation and adoption.
Over the course of time, the feature will be continuously fine-tuned, and the technology may extend even into the everyday KYC flow at a later date. That could make migration much quicker, reduce human-validator dependency, and make the Pi ecosystem even more seamless.
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