Visa is quietly moving stablecoins into the back office of money | FOMO Daily
11 min read
Visa is quietly moving stablecoins into the back office of money
Visa’s stablecoin settlement pilot now spans nine blockchains and has reached a $7 billion annualized run rate, showing that stablecoins are moving deeper into the hidden settlement layer of mainstream payments. The key shift is not direct consumer checkout yet, but institutional treasury, settlement and card-program infrastructure.
Most people think payments happen when they tap a card, scan a phone or click a checkout button. That is the part they see. The receipt appears, the order goes through, and the customer moves on. But behind that simple moment is a whole chain of settlement, treasury movement, risk management and bank to bank coordination. The problem is that the old system still carries delays, cut off times, weekend gaps and cross-border friction. Visa’s stablecoin pilot is not about replacing the customer experience overnight. It is about testing whether stablecoins can become another rail for moving value after the transaction has already been approved. This is where things change. Crypto adoption may arrive first in the back office, not at the shop counter.
For years, stablecoins were mainly seen as a way for crypto traders to move in and out of volatile tokens without touching the banking system every time. That was useful, but it kept stablecoins inside the crypto casino in the minds of many people. Now the use case is becoming more practical. A dollar backed stablecoin can move value quickly across networks, and that makes it interesting for institutions that need better settlement options. Visa’s current pilot is about issuers and acquirers being able to settle with the network using stablecoins over supported blockchains. That sounds technical, but the plain-English point is simple. Stablecoins are being tested as treasury plumbing for large payment businesses.
Visa is keeping the old system in the middle
The important thing is that Visa is not stepping away from its role. It is not saying every merchant and consumer should abandon cards and go fully onchain. It is doing something more strategic. It is putting stablecoin rails underneath the existing payment network while keeping Visa as the common settlement layer. That matters because big financial firms do not want chaos. They want more options, but they also want familiar controls, compliance paths and partner relationships. Visa said the expansion gives partners more choice across blockchains while letting them rely on Visa as a common settlement layer. What this really means is that traditional payment giants are not ignoring stablecoins. They are learning how to absorb them.
The chain list tells a bigger story
The nine-chain footprint is not only a bragging point. It shows how payment companies are thinking about a multi-chain world. Different networks may serve different needs. Some may focus on low-cost transactions. Some may offer stronger privacy controls for regulated institutions. Some may connect to consumer wallets and exchange-linked liquidity. Some may be built specifically for stablecoin settlement. That does not mean every chain will become equally important. It means Visa is building optionality. The payment world does not want to bet everything on one rail if partners have different needs. The winner may not be one chain replacing all others. The winner may be the company that can make several rails usable through one trusted settlement relationship.
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A $7 billion annualized run rate is meaningful, but it should not be exaggerated. Visa’s overall annual payments volume is still measured in the trillions. Reuters reported in January that Visa’s stablecoin settlement run rate was $4.5 billion at the time, compared with $14.2 trillion in annual payments volume processed by Visa the previous year. That shows both sides of the story. Stablecoin settlement is still tiny compared with the whole Visa machine, but it is growing from a real base. The signal is not that stablecoins have taken over global payments. The signal is that stablecoins have moved from theory into live payment infrastructure experiments.
The growth is the part to watch
The more interesting number is the growth rate. Visa said the pilot’s annualized stablecoin settlement run rate is up 50 percent from the prior quarter. That suggests the rail is not sitting idle. It is being used, tested and expanded by partners. The problem is that Visa has not broken down the volume by chain, partner, stablecoin or geography, so nobody outside the company can see which rails are doing the heavy lifting. That keeps the story grounded. This is still a pilot. It is not a full public map of stablecoin settlement demand. But even with those limits, the direction is clear. More financial firms are becoming comfortable enough to test stablecoins in the machinery of payments.
The quiet nature of this shift is what makes it powerful. A person buying coffee, paying for groceries or ordering online may not know whether the back-end settlement eventually touched a blockchain. They may not care. They only care that the payment works, the merchant gets paid, and nothing weird happens. That is how infrastructure usually wins. It becomes normal before it becomes visible. People did not need to understand card settlement networks to use cards. They did not need to understand cloud infrastructure to use apps. They may not need to understand stablecoin settlement to benefit from faster or more resilient payment plumbing. The best infrastructure often disappears into the background.
Merchant acceptance is still not solved
There is a big difference between stablecoin settlement and stablecoin merchant acceptance. Visa’s crypto chief told Reuters in January that there was no current merchant acceptance at scale for stablecoin holders to spend directly, even though Visa saw demand from stablecoin-linked card providers. That distinction matters. Stablecoins may move behind the scenes while customers still use cards, wallets and familiar checkout systems. The crypto dream of paying directly with tokens at every merchant is not here at scale. What is emerging first is a bridge model. Customers and businesses can stay in familiar payment experiences while stablecoins help settle value underneath.
Visa’s work with Bridge shows the same pattern. Bridge enabled stablecoin linked Visa cards were live in 18 countries in March 2026, with planned expansion to more than 100 countries across Europe, Asia Pacific, Africa and the Middle East by the end of the year. Visa also said the cards let consumers make everyday purchases from stablecoin balances at more than 175 million merchant locations. That does not mean every merchant is suddenly accepting stablecoins directly. It means the card network can sit between stablecoin balances and normal merchant acceptance. This is the practical route. Instead of waiting for every shop to understand crypto wallets, stablecoins can connect to the systems merchants already trust.
The December 2025 U.S. launch was another important step. Visa said it brought USDC settlement to U.S. institutions with more than $3.5 billion in annualized stablecoin settlement volume, and CryptoSlate reported that Cross River Bank and Lead Bank were initially settling over Solana. The point is not just that a blockchain was used. The point is that regulated banks entered the settlement flow. That changes the conversation. Stablecoins are no longer only a crypto exchange tool. They are becoming something banks, card programs and payment partners may use to manage obligations, liquidity and settlement timing.
Seven-day money movement matters
One of the practical reasons stablecoins keep getting attention is availability. Traditional financial settlement can slow down around weekends, holidays and banking cut offs. Stablecoin rails can operate around the clock. Visa’s U.S. settlement announcement highlighted faster funds movement, seven day availability and added resilience across weekends and holidays. That may sound boring, but it is not. In large payment systems, timing is money. If settlement can happen faster, businesses may manage liquidity better. If funds are not trapped over a weekend, treasury teams have more flexibility. The value is not always visible to consumers, but it can matter greatly to institutions.
Stablecoin adoption inside mainstream payments depends on trust. Big payment firms need clarity around reserves, compliance, redemption, sanctions controls and legal treatment. That is why regulation matters. The more stablecoins are treated as serious payment instruments rather than speculative side products, the easier it becomes for banks and networks to use them. The problem is that regulation also changes the power map. If stablecoins become regulated payment assets, the biggest winners may not be crypto-native dreamers. They may be banks, card networks, infrastructure firms, custodians and stablecoin issuers that can meet institutional requirements. This is where the stablecoin story becomes less rebellious and more financial-industrial.
The old crypto story is being rewritten
Crypto used to sell itself as an escape from banks and card networks. The new stablecoin story is different. It is being folded into banks and card networks. That does not mean the original crypto ideas are dead, but it does mean the mainstream route is more hybrid than revolutionary. Stablecoins can still use blockchain rails, but the customer experience may still be a Visa card. The issuer may still be regulated. The partner may still be a bank. The merchant may still receive ordinary local currency. What this really means is that stablecoins are not destroying the old payment system from the outside. They are being absorbed into it from underneath.
This is also a defensive move. If stablecoins really do become important to global money movement, Visa cannot afford to stand still. Payment networks make money by staying relevant to how value moves. If a new rail threatens to shift settlement away from them, the smart move is not to deny it. The smart move is to connect to it, shape it and make it usable through the existing network. That is what Visa appears to be doing. It is turning stablecoins from a potential disruption into a tool inside its own operating model. That does not guarantee success, but it shows strategic awareness. Visa is not waiting for stablecoins to become a threat at checkout. It is working on them at settlement.
The stablecoin economy is still uneven
Even with this progress, the stablecoin market is not clean and simple. Much of stablecoin volume still comes from trading, arbitrage and crypto-market activity rather than ordinary payments. Reuters reported that Visa and Allium Labs adjusted stablecoin volume figures to remove high frequency trading and other non-payment activity, showing the difference between raw blockchain activity and real payment use. That matters because the industry can easily overstate adoption if it counts every onchain movement as a payment. The better question is not how much stablecoin volume exists in total. It is how much of it represents real settlement, treasury movement, remittance, commerce or business activity.
For stablecoins to become routine payment plumbing, they must prove they are reliable. That means the token must hold its peg. Reserves must be credible. Networks must stay online. Compliance must work. Partners must be able to reconcile transactions properly. Banks must understand the risk. Regulators must be comfortable enough not to shut the door. Merchants and customers must not be exposed to unnecessary confusion. This is why Visa’s pilot language matters. A pilot gives room to test the rail without pretending the whole world has changed overnight. The mature story is not instant disruption. It is controlled integration.
The winner may be the invisible layer
Stablecoins may win in payments without most people ever saying, “I am using stablecoins.” That sounds strange, but it is common in infrastructure. People do not talk about the pipes when the water runs. They do not talk about payment settlement when the card works. Stablecoins could become a back-end option that helps payment firms move value, reduce friction and support global programs while the front-end experience stays familiar. That would be a quieter kind of adoption. It would not look like the old crypto dream of replacing every card terminal with a wallet scan. It would look like stablecoins becoming another rail inside the financial machine.
The next test is whether the pilot becomes routine. Visa needs to show that stablecoin settlement can work across more partners, more geographies, more currencies or stablecoins, and more real operational use cases. It also needs to show that multi chain support is more than a logo list. The real question is which rails are used, where they are used, and whether they solve a specific settlement problem better than the old system. If the answer is yes, stablecoins will keep moving deeper into payment infrastructure. If the answer is no, they may remain a specialist option for a narrow group of partners. The $7 billion run rate shows progress, but the next phase will decide whether this becomes a habit.
The real story is boring infrastructure
The most important stablecoin story may not be flashy at all. It may not be a consumer app, a viral token or a checkout revolution. It may be a settlement update inside a payment network. That is why Visa’s move matters. It shows stablecoins becoming boring, useful and institutional. For crypto, that may be a bigger milestone than another hype cycle. For payments, it may be the beginning of a new settlement layer that customers never notice. The old crypto crowd wanted the world to see the revolution. The stablecoin revolution may happen quietly, behind the glass, inside the plumbing of money.
Crypto becoming the most muted topic on X shows a growing split between market believers and everyday users tired of spam, hype and repetitive content. The industry may still be gaining institutional rails, but its public attention engine is showing signs of fatigue.