Visa is accelerating its push into blockchain‑based payments, expanding its stablecoin settlement pilot to nine networks and signaling that crypto‑native rails are becoming a core part of its global settlement strategy.
The company has added Base, Polygon, Canton Network, Arc and Tempo to its existing support for Ethereum, Solana, Avalanche and Stellar, according to CoinDesk report. The expansion marks one of the most aggressive moves yet by a major payments giant toward integrating stablecoins into real‑world financial infrastructure.
A Settlement Network Built for Speed and Liquidity
Visa’s stablecoin settlement pilot allows issuers and acquirers to settle transactions using USDC and other stablecoins, bypassing traditional banking channels that typically rely on slower, batch‑based processes.
According to CoinDesk, the program has already reached a $7 billion annualized run rate, up 50% quarter‑over‑quarter—a sign that demand for faster, programmable settlement is rising sharply among Visa’s partners.
By supporting a wide range of blockchains, Visa aims to:
- Increase liquidity access for partners across multiple ecosystems
- Reduce settlement times from days to near real‑time
- Enable cross‑border settlement without relying on correspondent banking
- Offer a unified settlement layer that abstracts away blockchain complexity
This multi‑chain approach positions Visa not just as a payments processor, but as a network‑agnostic settlement hub for the next generation of digital money.
Why These Blockchains?
Each newly added network brings strategic advantages:
- Base – Coinbase‑aligned, fast‑growing L2 with strong institutional traction
- Polygon – Scalable, low‑cost environment ideal for high‑volume settlement
- Canton Network – Enterprise‑focused, privacy‑preserving blockchain for regulated institutions
- Arc & Tempo – Emerging networks optimized for speed and interoperability
Combined with Ethereum’s security, Solana’s high throughput, Avalanche’s subnets, and Stellar’s cross‑border focus, Visa now spans a diverse set of infrastructures tailored to different settlement needs.
Stablecoins as a New Financial Rail
Visa’s strategy reflects a broader shift: stablecoins are evolving from speculative crypto tools into institutional settlement assets.
Key advantages driving adoption:
- 24/7 availability vs. banking hours
- Programmability for automated treasury operations
- Lower cross‑border friction
- Transparent, auditable settlement flows
For Visa, stablecoins are not a replacement for existing systems—they’re an upgrade path. By acting as a common settlement layer, Visa can unify disparate blockchain ecosystems under a single operational framework.
What This Means for the Future of Payments
Visa’s expansion signals a future where:
- Merchants may settle globally in minutes, not days
- Issuers and acquirers can choose the blockchain that best fits their liquidity and cost needs
- Stablecoins become a standard settlement asset across fintech and banking
- Payment networks operate across both traditional and crypto‑native rails seamlessly
Visa’s $7B run rate shows that stablecoin settlement is already gaining real traction. With nine blockchains now in play, the company is positioning itself at the center of a multi‑chain financial future where speed, interoperability, and liquidity define the next era of global payments.
