
* Visa now allows U.S. card issuers to settle transactions in USDC
* The change affects backend settlement, not consumers
* USDC settlement enables seven-day availability and faster liquidity movement
* The move reflects growing institutional adoption of stablecoins
On December 16, 2025, Visa Inc. announced that U.S. issuer and acquirer partners can now settle VisaNet obligations using Circle’s USD-backed stablecoin, USDC, marking the first time this capability has been available in the United States.
The rollout builds on Visa’s stablecoin settlement pilot programs that began overseas and reflects the company’s effort to modernize payment settlement infrastructure using blockchain technology.
This article explains how the capability works, why it matters, how it fits into the broader USDC ecosystem, and what real-world uses stablecoins like USDC already have today.
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Visa Confirms USDC Settlement for US Card Issuers and Acquirers
Visa’s official press release confirmed that:
* U.S. card issuers and acquirers can settle transaction obligations using USDC, a fully reserved stablecoin pegged to the U.S. dollar.
* The capability operates over supported blockchain networks, initially including Solana, with Cross River Bank and Lead Bank among the first participants.
* Visa plans to roll out broader access through 2026.
* The introduction of USDC settlement does not change the consumer card payment experience at the point of sale.
Visa also confirmed that this builds on its pilot programs where monthly stablecoin settlement volume had surpassed a $3.5 billion annualized run rate as of late November 2025.
What USDC Is and Why It Matters for Settlement
USDC (issued by Circle) is a stablecoin, a digital token designed to maintain a 1:1 peg to the U.S. dollar.
It is issued by Circle Internet Group, a U.S.-based payments technology company.
Important characteristics of USDC include:
* Dollar peg: Each token is backed by a reserve of U.S. dollars and/or dollar-equivalents.
* Blockchain-native: USDC exists on multiple public blockchains and can be transferred programmatically.
* Wide usage: It is among the most widely adopted stablecoins in global digital finance.
Unlike a central bank digital currency (CBDC), which would be issued by a government authority, USDC is a privately issued digital asset whose value is maintained through reserves and audits.
How USDC Settlement Works With Visa
Visa’s settlement innovation does not replace traditional card payment rails or require consumers to use cryptocurrencies. Instead, it offers a new backend settlement option for the banks and fintechs that issue cards or acquire merchant transactions.
Key points of the Visa approach include:
Blockchain Infrastructure
Visa’s settlement option initially uses the Solana blockchain to transfer USDC between partners. This reflects a broader trend of using blockchain systems to support high-speed, verifiable transfer of tokenized assets.
Seven-Day Settlement Windows
Visa’s framework enables:
* Settlement seven days a week, rather than restricted to traditional banking business days.
* Faster liquidity movement that can support treasury management for banks and fintech partners.
Interoperability
Visa says this settlement layer is interoperable with existing financial systems, supporting programmable and automated settlement flows alongside legacy rails.
No Consumer Impact
Critically, consumers paying with Visa cards will not see cryptocurrencies at checkout, the settlement choice affects behind-the-scenes movement of funds between institutions.
Why Visa Is Integrating Stablecoin Settlement
Visa frames the move as part of modernizing its settlement infrastructure and responding to demand from financial institutions that seek:
* Faster movement of funds.
* Improved treasury and liquidity management.
* Greater operational resilience across weekends and holidays.
* Programmable settlement options that integrate with existing operations.
Visa’s rollout follows early pilots that began in 2023 in regions outside the U.S., where the company first tested stablecoin settlement capabilities with selected partners.
Visa’s USDC Move Aligns With Shifting US Stablecoin Regulation
Visa’s move comes against the backdrop of evolving U.S. regulation around stablecoins and digital assets. In December 2025, the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) conditionally approved several crypto firms, including Circle, for national trust bank charters, a regulatory step toward integrating stablecoin issuance closer to mainstream banking.
This regulatory context underscores that stablecoins like USDC are increasingly recognized as institutional payment and settlement tools, although they remain distinct from official central bank digital currencies (CBDCs).
USDC’s Real-World Use Cases Today
USDC already has documented, operational uses across global finance:
* Cross-border payments: MoneyGram allows users to convert cash to USDC and back, enabling near-instant international transfers.
* Institutional settlement: Visa, Worldpay, and partner banks use USDC to settle payment obligations without relying on correspondent banking networks.
* Exchange trading and liquidity: USDC is a base trading pair on Coinbase, Binance, Kraken, and OKX, allowing traders to move between crypto assets and dollar-equivalent value without bank transfers.
* Treasury operations: Fintech firms use USDC for intraday liquidity management and automated treasury flows.
* Payroll and contractor payments: Crypto-enabled payroll platforms pay international contractors in USDC to reduce FX fees and settlement delays.
* Merchant payments: Shopify merchants can accept USDC through crypto payment gateways and settle in dollar-equivalent value.
* DeFi lending: Platforms like Aave and Compound allow users to lend and borrow USDC, making it one of the largest stablecoins by total value locked in DeFi.
* Escrow and conditional payments: USDC is widely used in smart-contract escrow, where funds are released automatically once conditions are met.
* Humanitarian aid: Aid organizations have piloted USDC-based disbursements to deliver funds directly to recipients’ wallets.
Who’s Using Visa’s USDC Settlement and How Markets Reacted
Initial participants in Visa’s U.S. settlement rollout are financial institutions like Cross River Bank and Lead Bank, which have begun settling transactions in USDC via blockchain infrastructure.
In financial markets, the announcement also had measurable effects: shares of Circle Internet Group (NYSE: CRCL) rose following the news that Visa enabled USDC settlement capability in the U.S. — reflecting investor recognition of stablecoin adoption milestones.
What Visa’s USDC Settlement Announcement Does Not Imply
To be clear:
* This does not make USDC legal tender in the United States, stablecoins remain private digital assets.
* Consumers are not required to use cryptocurrencies at checkout with Visa cards.
* Visa has not replaced the U.S. dollar; USDC is simply another settlement option for institutions.
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