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Policy

Stablecoin Payments Guide: How to Use Digital Dollars Every Day

This article was first published on Deythere. Stablecoin payments are picking up speed and moving into a very noticeable crypto aspect. As of 2026, big fintech and payment companies are integ

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
July 12, 2026
15 min read
NEWS
Stablecoin Payments Guide: How to Use Digital Dollars Every Day
CryptoCompass editorial visual for policy coverage.

This article was first published on Deythere.

Stablecoin payments are picking up speed and moving into a very noticeable crypto aspect. As of 2026, big fintech and payment companies are integrating stablecoins into daily commerce. Take Visa and Stripe for example, they’re already letting businesses accept digital-dollar payments all over the world, and in Latin America, consumers are turning to Tether (USDT) as a sort of a digital cash equivalent. 

Meanwhile, banks and regulators ( the EU’s MiCA or the US’s GENIUS Act) are getting on the same page and creating clear rules for stablecoins. 

Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies that are pegged to stable assets, usually the big fiat currencies like the US dollar. They’re different to the likes of Bitcoin because their value stays fixed (i.e. 1 USD per coin) which makes them perfectly suited for everyday spending. 

They also settle fast on blockchain networks and usually  cost a lot less to send across borders than wires or cards. This makes stablecoin payments very acceptable for things like remittances, online shopping, bills and even in-store purchases.

For example, Stripe processed over $223 million in stablecoin payments within weeks of launch across about 70+ countries. Visa’s new USDC settlement lets banks move money 24/7 via blockchain  even on weekends, still without a hitch for the consumer.

However, using stablecoins also means users have to navigate new hoops and considerations. Consumers need a crypto wallet (digital address), have to decide which stablecoin and network to use, and need to understand on/off ramps (converting to/from fiat). There are also security and regulatory implications.

What Are Stablecoins and Why Should You Use Them for Payments?

Stablecoins are crypto tokens where the value is fixed to another asset (usually $1 USD). In the world today, almost all stablecoins are pegged to the dollar. The biggest stablecoins (USDT, USDC, etc.) are backed by cash, U.S. Treasury bills and other assets; and the issuers usually publish audits or attestations of those reserves. 

This backing means that, in normal circumstances, a user can cash out one coin for one dollar at any time. Because of this, stablecoins make money transfers predictable and help avoid the wild volatility of regular crypto or unstable currencies.

The benefits of using them in everyday life are numerous:

Stability: The $1 peg makes them reliable for pricing goods (no sudden price swings).

Speed: Payments clear in seconds on the blockchain, instead of days via banks.

Low Cost: Fees are usually low (fractions of a cent on Layer-2 networks, and network gas fees can vary).

Global Reach: You can send value all over the world with just an internet connection, without having to worry about banking hours or FX costs.

Programmability: Businesses can even embed stablecoin transfers into software (e.g automatic escrow for deliveries).

Privacy & Inclusion: They provide an option for unbanked or underbanked people to transact digitally  which is especially useful in emerging markets.

For these reasons, many Fintech firms are starting to treat stablecoin payments just like another form of payment. Companies like Stripe and PayPal now offer PYUSD, and crypto platforms like Coinbase Commerce let merchants accept stablecoins.

Even traditional banks like Revolut and Nubank allow customers to hold a balance in USDC or USDT to make international transactions easier. Therenia also consumer-focused projects like Meta’s digital wallet and even the whispers of Amazon’s plans for a stablecoin app.

However, despite the infrastructure coming along nicely, the real-world usage of stablecoins is still growing. A recent Reuters report showed that most stablecoin usage is still all about crypto trading and remittances and that isn’t going to change overnight. 

As regulators start to clarify the rules and companies start to build more user-friendly solutions, things are expected to change. In the meantime, stablecoins act like a digital dollar that makes everyday payments a lot faster and cheaper.

Stablecoin paymentsStablecoin payments

How Stablecoin Payments Work – Step by Step

Using stablecoin payments is a straightforward process:

Get a Wallet: Pick a crypto wallet (either software or an app) that supports stablecoins. Common self custody wallets are MetaMask or Trust Wallet. Most exchanges also provide wallets for users once they’ve signed up, e.g. Binance, Coinbase. All these wallets have a public address (like an account number) and a private key ( secret password) that users need to keep safe.

Buy Stablecoins: Convert your currency (like USD or EUR) into stablecoins like USDC or USDT using a crypto exchange or broker. You can also use a service like Coinbase to deposit some fiat via your bank card and then buy some stablecoins. Some newer Fintech apps like Nova in the US or Mercury in Africa may even let you buy stablecoins directly from your bank balance but always make sure you’re choosing the right blockchain based on the lowest fees.

Send Them to Your Wallet (if needed): If you bought stablecoins somewhere else and you want to move them to your personal wallet, you just need to send them to your wallet address. Make sure you get the recipient’s address exactly, because crypto transfers are final. If you need to, check on a block explorer to make sure everything was sent correctly.

Spend Your Stablecoins: Now you can go ahead and make payments with your wallet’s balance. There are a few different ways to do this:

  • Peer-to Peer (P2P): Send a payment to a friend or family member by their wallet address.
  • Merchant Payment: Pay at shops or online stores that accept stablecoins. Some merchants give you a QR code or wallet address to scan and send the stablecoins over.
  • Crypto Cards: Some fintech platforms give you a debit card linked to your stablecoin balance so you can spend your coins anywhere.  For example, Kast Card and MoonPay’s card allow you to spend USDC anywhere Visa/Mastercard is accepted. The card automatically converts your stablecoins to local currency at checkout.
  • Online Browser Wallets: Use a browser extension like MetaMask to make payments on e-commerce sites. Stripe and Coinbase now allow certain m merchants to even settle in stablecoins.
  • Remittances: Send money abroad to a contact’s crypto wallet, who can then spend it or cash it out.

Swap Back to Fiat (if you need to): Once you have received your stablecoins, you can convert them back to fiat via an exchange or bank that supports stablecoins. This requires KYC/AML verification in most places.

Example Scenario: Paying a Bill with Stablecoin Payments

Suppose you want to pay your freelance consultant in Mexico with stablecoins. You would:

  • Ensure both you and your consultant have crypto wallets (for example, Coinbase Wallet).
  • Buy USDC on a U.S. exchange by linking your bank.
  • Send USDC to your consultant’s wallet address. (The blockchain confirms the transfer in minutes.)
  • Your consultant can then hold USDC as digital savings (earning interest or rewards) or immediately cash out via a local exchange.

This process avoids high international wire fees and FX costs. It uses the blockchain as the “rail” for stablecoin payments, which now mirrors traditional international transfer speed and cost or even outperforms it.

StablecoinIssuer (Type)Peg (Backing)Typical Use in PaymentsAudits/TransparencyUSDCCircle (USD fiat-backed)1:1 USD (cash & short-term Treasuries)Business & consumer payments, remittances, treasury operations; Settlement via Stripe/Visa.Monthly reserve attestations (Deloitte). Public audits.USDT (Tether)Tether Ltd (USD fiat-backed)1:1 USD (cash, Treasuries, crypto assets)Widely used for cross-border remittances, merchant settlements, trading. Popular in Latin America for daily expenses.Monthly attestations (BDO). Historically opaque but improving.DAIMakerDAO (Crypto-collateralized)1:1 USD (backed by crypto collat.)Decentralized stablecoin; mainly used in DeFi but also for payments where fiat coins unavailable.Governance-driven. Transparent on-chain, but complex backing.PYUSDPayPal (via Paxos)1:1 USDConsumer payments on Paypal, Venmo; 24/7 business disbursements.Regulated Paxos issuance; audited.

Payment Platforms and Merchant Acceptance

Most major payment platforms now support stablecoin rails. Stripes Treasury API and Checkout are accepting USDC and other stablecoins for global payouts. Visa launched USDC settlement in the US, connecting blockchain-based payments to the traditional card network.

A global consortium (Visa, Mastercard, Coinbase, etc.) even announced an “Open USD” stablecoin project to create open, high-speed stablecoin rails.

For merchants and consumers, this means that end users just swipe their  Visa card or click “Pay with Crypto” without even realizing a stablecoin has done all the heavy lifting to sort out the payment. In fact, Visa records that over $3.5 billion in stablecoin settlements runs through their network every year. 

All of these add up to stablecoins gradually becoming a normal part of everyday commerce, especially for cross border and online purchases.

Crypto debit cards bridge wallets and retail.  Companies like MoonPay, Kast and Kaze now allow users to load up their stablecoin balance and use it at any store that accepts Visa/Mastercard. According to a survey, 71% of stablecoin holders say they’d use a card to spend crypto, and 50% have bought from a business because it accepted stablecoins. 

All of these means stablecoins are behaving more like a prepaid card, giving users real-world utility for groceries, transport, etc., with instant conversion to local currency at point of sale.

Nonprofit and Humanitarian Work also benefits greatly from this. NGOs use stablecoins to get aid (stable value in crisis zones) and let recipients spend funds on local markets via a crypto wallet.

In regions where banks aren’t reliable,  getting a stablecoin or cash-to-crypto on-ramp (like MoneyGram’s Stellar network kiosks in Latin America) can literally bring everyday financial services to new users.

Fees, Networks and User Experience

Network Fees: every time a user does a stablecoin transaction, there’s a blockchain “gas” fee to pay (which goes to the validators). On Ethereum, this can vary (typically around $0.10 to $2 per transfer in 2026), but many stablecoins also use low cost chains (Tron, Solana, Polygon, Base). For instance, sending USDT on Tron will only cost a few cents. Choosing the cheapest network can slash costs.

Platform Fees: buying stablecoins on an exchange may come with a trading fee or some other charges. Sending from one wallet to another costs the network fee, no issuer fee. Most crypto debit cards are identical in that they have no conversion fee beyond a small network fee. 

According to Stripe, using stablecoins can “reduce fees by 80-90%” compared to traditional wire transfers. For small everyday amounts (shopping, bills) the user might end up with just a flat 1-2% equivalent cost, certainly lower than credit card charges.

User Experience: modern wallets and apps are trying their best to be very simple. Apps like MetaMask, Trust Wallet guide users through the process of picking a network and token.

Some of the more user friendly fiat-backed apps (Revolut, Remitly, MoneyGram) actually just integrate stablecoin balances invisibly: you just see a USD balance that’s actually just held in USDC. The aim is to make it all totally seamless, as simple as scanning a QR code in a shop or paying automatically via wallet integration at checkout.

However, UI still struggles with legacy payments; users must manage private keys, double-check addresses, and understand multiple networks. That’s a key friction point that many fintechs are actively solving (e.g. by offering insured custodial accounts and single-click pay).

Stablecoin paymentsStablecoin payments

Stability, Risks, And Regulations

Despite being known as ‘stablecoins’, they’re not entirely risk-free. Users need to have faith in the issuer’s reserves. Crypto scams and hacks are a problem too. Don’t forget to double check addresses and use a hardware wallet or a trusted custodian if you’re storing large balances.

Regulators all over the world have focused on payment stablecoins. In the U.S., the 2025 GENIUS Act legally defines stablecoins used for payments: they must be 100% backed by safe assets (cash, Treasuries, reserves) and issuers cannot pay interest directly to holders. 

This law pushed stablecoins to invest heavily in U.S. government debt and banned risky reserve practices. Similar rules exist in Europe (MiCA) and are under discussion in Asia.

As a result, major stablecoins today mostly hold high-quality reserves; for example, Circle’s USDC reserves are fully liquid cash or Treasuries, aligning with regulations.

In approved jurisdictions, stablecoin payments are generally okay to use as a payment option, but always make sure to check what the local laws are first. For instance, under GENIUS Act rules, a US bank can hold onto USDC without having to be a money transmitter.

The stablecoin itself is simply treated like a digital representation of fiat. Users should avoid unbacked coins or those not offering clear redemption rights.

Market Adoption And Expert Insights

Stablecoins are growing at a very fast rate. Chainalysis reports that they processed $28 trillion in real economic transactions in 2025 while forecasting hundreds of trillions by the 2030s as younger, crypto-native generations start inheriting wealth.

Visa’s head of Growth Products has said that banks are getting ready to use stablecoins themselves for faster settlement. Stripe has seen a lot of  interest from businesses wanting to integrate stablecoin payments which is actually a sign that financial institutions are looking for faster, more programmable settlement options.

In developing markets, usage is also high already. In Latin America, USDT is basically the digital cash people use to avoid inflation and send remittances. African fintech company Flutterwave has even started letting merchants hold and receive USDC/USDT as an alternative to having a bank account.

World bank cofounders and fintech leaders have noted that stablecoins can empower people who don’t have a bank account and protect them against currency collapse.

A quote from Santander’s Paul Horlock says: “From a developing country perspective, stablecoins protect people from inflation and currency devaluation… they are a pathway to real economic empowerment and equality worldwide.”. 

This is  true  because millions of people in India, Nigeria, Brazil and other places now regularly use stablecoins for daily remittances and payments, often using mobile wallets.

On the merchant side, faster settlement and transparency are key features. A Stripe analysis points out that “stablecoin trends for businesses” include faster networks and being able to see everything being done which makes them really attractive for treasury and payroll.

Recently, Visa and Mastercard teamed up to launch the “Open Standard” consortium to create an industry-neutral stablecoin which suggests the desire to make stablecoin payments as easy and common as card transactions.

Conclusion

Stablecoin payments are on track to become a mainstream payment method for everyday transactions.

Consumers and businesses value their speed, low fees, and global reach. The financial industry and government regulators are working on making it more reliable and safe to use.

To start using stablecoins for everyday purchases,  one will need to set up a good secure wallet, buy a reputable stable coin ( like USDC or USDT) and look out for merchants or cards that accept it. 

As they get even more stable and more people start to use them, it could soon feel just as natural to use a stablecoin as it does to just swipe a credit card.

Glossary 

Stablecoin: A type of cryptocurrency whose value is pegged to a fiat currency ( like US dollars). Examples are USDC or USDT.

Fiat-based stablecoin: A stablecoin which has real assets (like cash or Treasury bills) stored in trust to back up its value.

Wallet (Crypto Wallet): A tool that stores your crypto keys and allows you to send and receive tokens. It can be software or hardware

On-ramp / Off-ramp: Methods of converting between fiat currency and crypto ( like using an exchange to buy or sell stablecoins)

Custodial vs non-custodial: Custodial wallets store your crypto keys with a service (exchange or custodian). Non-custodial wallets keep keys only with you.

Frequently Asked Questions About Stablecoin Payments 

How do I buy stablecoins to use for payments?

Buy stablecoins on a good exchange (Coinbase for example) by putting some money in your account then trading it for a stablecoin like USDC or USDT. Some banks also offer the option to buy stablecoins via their apps. Once you’ve bought the stablecoins you can either keep them in the exchange wallet or transfer them to a wallet that you own and control.

Can I use stablecoins at regular stores or online retailers?

Yes,  but only if they support crypto payments. Some online shops do allow users to pay in stablecoins using the likes of Coinbase Commerce where the payment will be settled in stablecoins. Many physical merchants still don’t directly take crypto, but you can use a crypto debit card (Visa/Mastercard) funded by your stablecoins to pay anywhere cards are accepted.

Are stablecoin transactions safe and reversible?

Stablecoin networks are secure but transactions are irreversible, so make m sure that the address you’re sending to is the right one.

 What fees can you expect when you use stablecoins?

There are two kinds of fees generally: network or gas fees and platform fees. Network fees go to blockchain validators (often just a few cents on low-cost chains). Platforms may charge for buying/selling stablecoins (exchange trading fees). Overall, stablecoins often reduce payment costs (sometimes by 90%) compared to international wires, but check your exchange/card fee schedule.

References

Cobo 

The Payments Association 

Stripe 

Chainalysis

Docs

Bitcoin Foundation

Disclaimer: This article is informational and not financial advice. Always do your own research and consider consulting a professional.