Marketdash

Visa Launches Stablecoin Settlement in the U.S., Taking Blockchain Payments Mainstream

MarketDash Editorial Team
9 hours ago
Visa is now letting its U.S. banking partners settle transactions using Circle's USDC stablecoin, marking a major step toward blockchain-based payments infrastructure with faster transfers and 24/7 availability.

Visa Inc. (V) just made stablecoins a lot more official. The payments giant announced Tuesday that it's launching USDC settlement in the United States, a milestone that could reshape how money moves through the financial system.

Here's what's happening: For the first time, U.S. issuer and acquirer partners can settle transactions with Visa using Circle's (CRCL) USDC, a fully reserved, dollar-backed stablecoin. Think of it as using digital dollars on a blockchain instead of traditional banking rails.

Why This Actually Matters

The shift enables faster fund transfers over blockchains, seven-day availability, and improved operational resilience on weekends and holidays. And here's the kicker: consumers won't notice a thing. Your card works exactly the same way, but behind the scenes, the settlement infrastructure is getting a serious upgrade.

Cross River Bank and Lead Bank are the first banking participants, already settling with Visa using USDC on the Solana blockchain. Visa plans to expand this capability across the U.S. through 2026, gradually building out the infrastructure.

But Visa isn't just using existing blockchains. The company is also a design partner for Arc, a new Layer 1 blockchain being developed by Circle, currently in public testnet. Arc is purpose-built to handle the performance and scalability demands of Visa's global commercial activity. Once Arc launches, Visa plans to use it for USDC settlement within its network and will operate a validator node, essentially becoming part of the blockchain's infrastructure itself.

"Financial institutions are looking for faster, programmable settlement options that integrate seamlessly with their existing treasury operations," said Rubail Birwadker, Global Head of Growth Products and Strategic Partnerships at Visa. "By bringing USDC settlement to the U.S., Visa is delivering a reliable, bank‑ready capability that improves treasury efficiency while maintaining the security, compliance and resiliency standards our network requires."

Visa's Bigger Stablecoin Play

This announcement comes just a day after Visa launched its Stablecoins Advisory Practice, expanding its push into digital payments and blockchain-based settlement. The company is clearly betting big on this space.

The numbers back up that bet. Visa has rapidly scaled its settlement activity to an annualized run rate of $3.5 billion as of November 30. Meanwhile, the broader stablecoin market has surpassed $250 billion in total value, suggesting that digital dollar infrastructure is moving from crypto curiosity to mainstream financial tool.

Price Action: Visa shares were up 0.06% at $347.09 and Circle Internet Group shares were up 3.36% at $77.99 during premarket trading on Monday, according to market data.

Visa Launches Stablecoin Settlement in the U.S., Taking Blockchain Payments Mainstream

MarketDash Editorial Team
9 hours ago
Visa is now letting its U.S. banking partners settle transactions using Circle's USDC stablecoin, marking a major step toward blockchain-based payments infrastructure with faster transfers and 24/7 availability.

Visa Inc. (V) just made stablecoins a lot more official. The payments giant announced Tuesday that it's launching USDC settlement in the United States, a milestone that could reshape how money moves through the financial system.

Here's what's happening: For the first time, U.S. issuer and acquirer partners can settle transactions with Visa using Circle's (CRCL) USDC, a fully reserved, dollar-backed stablecoin. Think of it as using digital dollars on a blockchain instead of traditional banking rails.

Why This Actually Matters

The shift enables faster fund transfers over blockchains, seven-day availability, and improved operational resilience on weekends and holidays. And here's the kicker: consumers won't notice a thing. Your card works exactly the same way, but behind the scenes, the settlement infrastructure is getting a serious upgrade.

Cross River Bank and Lead Bank are the first banking participants, already settling with Visa using USDC on the Solana blockchain. Visa plans to expand this capability across the U.S. through 2026, gradually building out the infrastructure.

But Visa isn't just using existing blockchains. The company is also a design partner for Arc, a new Layer 1 blockchain being developed by Circle, currently in public testnet. Arc is purpose-built to handle the performance and scalability demands of Visa's global commercial activity. Once Arc launches, Visa plans to use it for USDC settlement within its network and will operate a validator node, essentially becoming part of the blockchain's infrastructure itself.

"Financial institutions are looking for faster, programmable settlement options that integrate seamlessly with their existing treasury operations," said Rubail Birwadker, Global Head of Growth Products and Strategic Partnerships at Visa. "By bringing USDC settlement to the U.S., Visa is delivering a reliable, bank‑ready capability that improves treasury efficiency while maintaining the security, compliance and resiliency standards our network requires."

Visa's Bigger Stablecoin Play

This announcement comes just a day after Visa launched its Stablecoins Advisory Practice, expanding its push into digital payments and blockchain-based settlement. The company is clearly betting big on this space.

The numbers back up that bet. Visa has rapidly scaled its settlement activity to an annualized run rate of $3.5 billion as of November 30. Meanwhile, the broader stablecoin market has surpassed $250 billion in total value, suggesting that digital dollar infrastructure is moving from crypto curiosity to mainstream financial tool.

Price Action: Visa shares were up 0.06% at $347.09 and Circle Internet Group shares were up 3.36% at $77.99 during premarket trading on Monday, according to market data.