For years, crypto’s privacy-minded users have been forced to live a double life: one app for secure messaging, another for sending Bitcoin. Radar Chat, which just launched on both iOS and Android, wants to collapse that into a single experience by combining Signal Protocol encryption with Bitcoin Lightning payments.
Radar Chat is built on Signal’s open-source protocol, which means messages are end-to-end encrypted using the same cryptographic framework trusted by journalists, activists, and anyone who doesn’t want their group chat leaked. On top of that messaging layer, the app integrates Bitcoin Lightning for near-instant payments.
In practical terms, a user enters a conversation, inputs an amount in sats (the smallest unit of Bitcoin, where 100 million sats equals one Bitcoin), and sends it. The recipient gets it instantly via Lightning. The whole flow lives inside the chat, the same way you’d send a photo or a voice note.
Crucially, the wallet is self-custodial. Radar Chat doesn’t hold your funds or manage your private keys. That’s a meaningful distinction from custodial payment apps where a company sits between you and your balance.
The team behind Radar includes COO Seth for Privacy, a well-known figure in crypto privacy circles, and has direct ties to Cake Wallet, a multi-currency wallet with two million users. The app is open-source, free of advertisements and trackers, and the team says it financially supports Signal’s operations.








