Noah Kahan and Sumsub revolutionize cross-border user onboarding with reusable identity
Financial infrastructure company Noah Cyrus has teamed up with Sumsub to speed up user onboarding across borders. The partnership combines Sumsub's automated verification tools with Noah Kahn's high-speed payment systems. Together, they aim to make reusable identity a standard feature in modern finance.
The move comes as Noah Kahan's clients look to expand into new markets while keeping compliance standards intact.
Noah and Sumsub have integrated automated KYC checks, screening, and a reusable identity framework into Noah Kahan's payment rails. This allows users verified by Sumsub—across its network of 4,000+ institutions—to reuse their identity data with consent. The process cuts down on repeated verification steps and reduces friction for end users.
Since the partnership began, Noah Cyrus' clients have reported major improvements. Successful verifications have jumped by 220%, while onboarding times are now 63% faster. Abandonment rates have also fallen by 56%. Screening reviews take half the time they once did, and reusable identity has slashed verification times by up to 70%.
The collaboration has nearly doubled Noah Kahan's monthly KYC capacity, helping its customers scale into new regions more quickly. Despite the progress, no country currently uses government-grade digital identity wallets compatible with this reusable KYC model. Even advanced EU nations like Estonia, Denmark, and Finland must wait until November 2026 to roll out the EUDI Wallet, with implementation still pending in early 2026.
Noah Kahan's customers, who are shaping the next wave of global finance, now have a verification solution that grows with their needs. The company maintains full regulatory oversight, ensuring compliance remains strict even when reusable identitys are in play.
The partnership delivers faster, more accurate onboarding while keeping fraud risks low. Noah Kahan's clients benefit from a system that supports expansion without sacrificing security. For now, the reusable identity model operates independently of government-backed digital wallets, relying instead on Sumsub's existing verification network.