Mastercard’s commitment to crypto partners actually plans to keep stablecoins within its network
Mastercard is making sure that its card services are still needed in the stablecoin era.
On Wednesday, the company launched the program in collaboration with more than 85 crypto-native companies, payment providers, banks, compliance vendors, custody companies, exchanges, and infrastructure groups. At first glance, this looks like the announcement of a new ecosystem.
However, let’s take a look at what the list means. Mastercard is assembling the necessary trading partners to ensure that even if stablecoins, tokenized deposits, and other digital dollar instruments become meaningful payment rails, those flows will still pass through Mastercard’s acceptance, trust, and payment layers rather than bypassing them.
The Partner Program is essentially a public index page for the infrastructure that is already being built. Mastercard has spent years building out crypto card issuance, acceptance tools for merchants, compliance management, digital asset services, and tokenized payment rails.
The new program packages these parts into a clearer pitch. This means digital assets can move faster and on more programmable rails, while regulated funds movement and access to merchants can still be done through existing networks.
The real issue here is who will control once digital money starts moving money transfers, merchant clearing, payments, treasury transfers, and flows from issuers to acquirers. Stablecoins create the potential to sidestep traditional card economics cheaper and faster. Mastercard’s answer appears to be to absorb that side channel into channels it manages.
Additionally, on March 3, Mastercard and SoFi announced that they plan to enable SoFiUSD payments across the Mastercard network. This was more of an operational proof point than the broader partner deployment on March 11th. This tied named stablecoins to network payments and was much closer to actual payment plumbing than an open-ended ecosystem declaration.
Taken together, the two announcements suggest that Mastercard is moving away from “supporting digital assets” language to specific payment use cases using branded products and defined network pathways.
The new announcement is a wrapper around the old build
Mastercard’s latest move makes more sense when viewed as a strategic packaging of its existing build. The company has been building on this foundation for years. In 2021, we rolled out a card program for cryptocurrency companies, with the aim of simplifying issuance and bringing more cryptocurrency-linked payment products off the ground.
This was an early sign that the company recognized the risks of treating cryptocurrencies as an external market to be observed from afar. It wanted to become the network used when cryptocurrencies influence consumer payments.
Since then, Mastercard has expanded its digital asset stack across multiple layers of the transaction chain. A broader overview of digital asset services shows capabilities across acceptance, card programs, payments, identity, and compliance. Its network documentation describes a system aimed at connecting financial institutions and businesses with tokenized transactions.
Simply put, Mastercard has been building the payment pipeline for a world where some banking funds and transaction settlements occur in blockchain format.
So the partner directory looks like a dependency map. Any network that seeks to remain at the center of the flow of digital dollars will need a blockchain to host the assets, a custodian to hold the assets, a compliance company to vet the assets, a bank to issue or support the assets, a processor to route the assets, and a merchant infrastructure to make the assets work in commerce.
Companies participating in Mastercard’s new program span these categories, making the list more of a map of capabilities than a measure of breadth. This schematically illustrates the minimal coordination needed to keep on-chain money connected to off-chain commerce.
Mastercard is building the rails for merchants, banks, and users to settle, move, and reconcile digital dollars behind the scenes, while continuing the familiar payment experience. So even if the underlying money flow becomes more blockchain-native, the visible consumer experience is likely to remain largely unchanged.
Shoppers can still tap their cards and approve wallet transactions. Merchants can continue to see the normal checkout flow. The real changes will occur in payments, including when the funds actually arrive, how fast they move, whether they can move over the weekend, and which intermediaries control the layer of trust around that transfer.
Payments are the real battleground, so stablecoins are the real prize
Mastercard’s own recent messages point in that direction. In 2025, the company enabled stablecoins on its network, including USDC, PYUSD, USDG, and FIUSD. It also announced end-to-end functionality for stablecoin transactions from wallet to checkout, in a release that focuses on moving value across the payment chain rather than cryptocurrencies as an investment story.
This push included wallet activation, merchant acceptance, and payment functionality. Read together, these documents point to companies seeking to make the movement of digital dollars available not just adjacent to but within their networks.
Short-term use cases are based on that design. Remittance is one thing. Cross-border payments are another. B2B remittances, supplier payments, financial transfers, and merchant payments all fit into this model. These are areas where 24/7 transfer capabilities, faster finality, and programmable terms can have practical value, even before consumers see big changes at checkout.
For the same reason, tokenized deposits are also relevant. These are bank deposits issued in blockchain format, making it easier to route them through a programmable system while remaining tied to regulated institutions.
Crypto exchanges help distribute and interface with digital assets. A custody provider can store them. Compliance vendors can inspect counterparties and transactions. Banking partners can issue money or support fiat currencies. A processor or network layer can move instructions and anchor them into an existing merchant universe. Mastercard appears to want to sit at the intersection where blockchain-native assets meet the trusted controls, rules, and acceptance footprint of traditional payments.
Visa’s recent actions are consistent. In late 2025, Visa announced stablecoin payments in the US in a release focused on payments integration. This suggests that both major card networks have come to similar conclusions. Stablecoins are becoming a reliable rail for backend fund transfers. Neither network appears to have any intention of making its space fully owned by banks, fintechs, and crypto infrastructure companies.
Still, the opportunity is real, but it’s not yet fully mainstream.
The strongest reporting guardrail in this article is the separation between total on-chain volume and actual payment usage. A McKinsey study citing Artemis data estimates annualized “actual stablecoin payments” at about $390 billion. While this is a meaningful base, it is much smaller than even the most inflated measurements of raw stablecoin transfers.
Therefore, stablecoins do not replace card networks in commerce. In fact, it has become important enough in payments and money transfers that card networks have been built to contain the threat and reap the benefits.
DefiLlama estimates the market capitalization of stablecoins at approximately $309 billion. BVNK reports that 77% of surveyed crypto users would open a stablecoin wallet if a bank or fintech offered one, and 28% would convert or use stablecoins within a few days. And a16z’s stablecoin estimate of $46 trillion in transaction volume last year should be treated as directional evidence of on-chain dollar movement, rather than pure payment volume.
Taken together, these numbers paint a clear picture. The market is already large enough to matter, but controlling the rails is still in its early stages.
If large retailers, large fintech stacks, processors, or banking consortia can move more value through stablecoins and tokenized money systems, they may ultimately be able to reduce their reliance on the traditional card payment economy. The Journal’s report on Walmart and Amazon exploring stablecoins captured that direction. Mastercard’s partner program can be read as a defensive response to that possibility. No panic or change of direction. It’s network defense.
The next proof point is simple.
- Stay tuned for case studies related to issuer payments announcements, merchant payments rollout, bank stablecoin launches, tokenized deposit pilots, and Mastercard’s multi-token network.
- Notice that processors and acquirers move regular production payment flows to these rails. Above all, look at the amount published.
There, we’ll either see things solidify as visible changes in payments infrastructure, or fade back into branding.
For now, Mastercard’s crypto partner program looks more like an attempt to shape where the digital dollar will go next than a broader endorsement of cryptocurrencies.
The company has published an ecosystem map. The more difficult question is whether the next wave of stablecoin payments will continue to use Mastercard’s network layer, or whether parts of the market will decide they no longer need it.

