My grandparents have never had a crypto. But they have always known their money.
My grandfather wears cash – not in a wallet, not on or tucked away – but randomly folded in his shirt bag. He slides them behind pages of an old diary, or sandwiched between faded coupons in a drawer through the TV. It’s never much. Just enough to feel that someone was thinking ahead.
When I was younger and needed money for school supplies, snacks or a rickshaw ride, he would take a note out as if it had only waited for me there. He is not flashy, but he never withheld. With the confidence of someone who has always kept enough, he gives.
In a way that only the really smart with money knows how to be.
The world of my grandmother is on order. Everything has its place, including her money.
She retains several wallets, each with its own … ecosystem of cash – one for daily use, one “in case” and some reserved for emergencies. Although what is eligible if an emergency is a mystery for the rest of us.
It doesn’t matter. She know.
Her money is never crumbled like that of my grandfather. She stains every note and smoothes out the corners on her knee with the same care that people probably give to love letters. She now has a credit card … reluctantly. Only for hospital visits, She says, ticking as if it is a visa for a strange place where she is not going to stay in for a long time.
She may feel tired, but she has certainly found her foot with it.
My other grandmother is sharper than most people I know. The kind of woman that you don’t challenge on numbers – unless you are ready to lose.
She follows every rupid. Not obsessive, only with precision. She built a portfolio before most women knew her age what someone was. Asks the right questions. Signs papers others said she couldn’t. At a time when women could not handle money, she made sure that nobody else would control her.
If she was born in a different time, she would not have worked alone at a bank. She had run it.
Owned it.
What all three unites is this – They are not afraid of money.
They deserved, saved, it stretched. Treated recessions, family situations, rising prices. Built safety nets and let it work – quietly, with dignity.
Over time they have adapted to banks. Cards. When the pandemic struck, they paid online – Tap, type, hesitate, try again. Ask questions. Pick up things. Get it done.
It was at the time that I realized … they are not resistant to change. They are rarely invited to it.


These are my grandparents, and I don’t want the future to leave them behind.
When I told them I wrote about Crypto, they blinked with wink.
“So … my money is in the air now?”
“And what if the internet goes off?”
“Is there a switch to this thing?”
“Is this … real?”
They laugh. Not out of dismissal, but nervousness. Because nobody ever explained it in a way that was logical for them.
They do not talk about capital flows or data on chains. But they understand value.
Liquidity.
Timing.
Discipline.
Risk.
They lived it in the most human way.
The world is changing. They see that. They don’t fight against it. They just wait for someone to open the door. It is not that they cannot or do not want to learn.
It is that nobody ever made it feel like it was meant for them.
So who has a chair on the Crypto table?
The average crypto holder is easy to recognize – not per face, but by data.
A recent report from Cryptoquant revealed that 61% of investors are between 25 and 44 years old. In fact, more than a third fall falls in the age bar of 25-34. Most are men. Most have degrees.


Source: Cryptuquant
Almost half of them have a bachelor. Another 28% went on. In short – Crypto is young, male, trained and digital fluent.
No mistake. Just a fact.
However, it also means that this financial limit is formed by a very specific type of user. Everyone? Still catching up. Or worse – left behind. And often those who are furthest about this future are not the furthest without money or interest.
They are just older.
In a system built on interfaces and directness, age may feel like the most invisible barrier of all.
And yes, older adults must be careful with risky assets. But caution is not the same as exclusion. If they want, they must be authorized to participate safely. Especially now. With crypto -wang -aimed at seniors on the rise, education is not optional – it is essential.
If you have to explain it, it is probably broken …
Despite his promises of financial inclusion, crypto still often feels like a gated club – coded by insiders, for insiders. And if you are older, unknown and not sure, the Lockout is not only technical.
It’s emotional.
Ask Jess Houllgrave, CEO of Again income, What keeps people back from crypto, and she does not start with regulations or volatility. She starts with the login screen. Herwelling offers social registrations – e -mail, Google, Apple – because for someone who is new, the first known click can be the difference between trying and walking away.
However, the challenge goes deeper. Houllgrave called it the intimidation factor, When she spoke with Ambcrypto.
The intimidation factor is not only about complexity … It is about consequence. When you have told a lifetime to check the small print, click on the wrong button on an unknown app will feel reasonably dangerous.
“Stories of scams and leaked reports naturally create skepticism.”
For older users, those who have spent decades on protecting pensions and avoiding small print, skepticism are wisdom.
Anthony Anzalone, founder of Xion, repeated this sentiment when he spoke with Ambcrypto.
“You have to meet users where they are, instead of expecting them to come to you.”
No gas costs. No jargon. No cryptographic walls. Apps must reflect daily life – e -mail registrations, dollar balances, seamless design. Dignity lives in the details. Readable fonts. Flows that are logical.
Because the moment you ask someone to understand something they have never heard of, you have already given them the feeling that they don’t hear.
Ronald Yung van Ravedao pulled a parallel when he said,
“Music has always been a universal language – something that transcends age, background or culture. The same principle must apply to crypto.”
Far too often we build up for smartness, not clarity. And if we do that, we don’t just lose users – we lose people. We have closed them from the future that we claim is for everyone. The solution? Intuitive design. Interfaces that feel instinctive, comfortable. Maybe even led. Yung even pointed to chatgpt and the iPhone. Not powerful because They are complex, but because they are simple and easy.
Because there is a world of difference between being curious and be confidently. Most people we leave behind are not undesirable. They are just fed up with the problem.
Inclusion is not about adding functions. It’s about pulling off fear. And that starts with design.
Crypto needs a grandma mode
If this system starts to realize its promise of decentralization, it must include the silver-haired crowd that it has left behind.
These are precisely the people who have spent lives on building the systems that we are now trying to reinvent. Support must be human for them. Real-time chat. Phone calls. Soft pushes. Large fonts. No dark patterns. And a test mode with fake activa for learning with low deployment.
No memespeak. No “Wen Moon.”
Speak as if someone’s grandfather is reading, because maybe he is.
Yulia Gontar from Super Protocol said it clearly when he said,
“Most crypto products are still not accessible nowadays – not only for older adults, but even for the average internet user.”
And she’s right. If decentralization is meant to remove barriers, why have so many systems the feeling that they have simply replaced one form of gateway with the other?
White papers, instead of small print. Daos, instead of bankers. The distance is as it is.
That is why her team again proposes the architecture herself – an AI marketplace that works without taking knowledge.
Inclusion is not just a function. It should be a blueprint.
Think they matter!
If your app needs an explanation of ten steps, a seed phase and a Reddit-Thread to function, your grandparents are not the problem. The system is instead.
Crypto talks about galaxies, bridged chains and even on Burger King menus. However, it still did not get my grandmother’s wallet. And to be honest? That’s wild.
The technology is healthy. The vision is ambitious. The intention – to create open, inclusive financial systems – is Nobel. Unfortunately, learning still feels as a Facetime with a fixed line. Although design is an integral part of the required improvements, here is a psychological element that we have to think of.
Shreya Bajaj, co-founder of Easy Hai-a platform that helps seniors to learn technology to think about something vital-begon with motivation.
Most seniors do not try to monkey in the next memecoin. They just want to understand the tools that their families use. Sometimes the only thing needed is one grandchild, a quiet afternoon and a little patience.
Not every session ends in a Metamask download. However, it opens a door that moment of time and intention.
The second point of Bajaj landed harder – does not talk. These are people who have led companies, children have raised, housed houses and made difficult decisions long before the word ‘on-chain’ existed. They may not know the jargon, but they know trust, value and loss. What they don’t need is to feel small in a space that claims to be for everyone.
Everyone is built differently. Some will dive into it, others will lean back. The task is not to push – it’s pace. Because respect is the difference between training and excluding.
Real recording is not flashy. It’s quiet. It looks like clear buttons, simpler words, fewer assumptions.
And maybe, a place to safely store a little snack money – in case that.