Mastercard’s crypto partner push is really a plan to keep stablecoins inside its network
Mastercard is trying to make sure the stablecoin era still needs its card services.
On Wednesday, the company launched a program with more than 85 crypto-native firms, payments providers, banks, compliance vendors, custody companies, exchanges, and infrastructure groups. On its face, that reads like another ecosystem announcement.
However, let’s look at what the list implies. Mastercard is assembling the counterparties it needs so that if stablecoins, tokenized deposits, and other digital-dollar instruments become meaningful payment rails, those flows can still pass through Mastercard’s acceptance, trust, and settlement layers rather than around them.
The partner program is essentially a public index page for infrastructure already under construction. Mastercard spent years building crypto card issuance, merchant-facing acceptance tools, compliance controls, digital asset services, and tokenized settlement rails.
The new program packages those pieces into a clearer pitch: digital assets can move faster and on more programmable rails, while regulated money movement and merchant access can still run through the existing network.
The real contest here is about who controls digital money once it starts moving in remittances, merchant settlement, payouts, treasury transfers, and issuer-acquirer flows. Stablecoins create the possibility of a cheaper or faster side road around traditional card economics. Mastercard’s answer appears to be to absorb that side road into its own governed routes.
Additionally, on March 3, Mastercard and SoFi said they would enable SoFiUSD settlement across the Mastercard network. That was a more operational proof point than the broader partner rollout on March 11. It tied a named stablecoin to network settlement, which is much closer to real payment plumbing than an open-ended ecosystem statement.
Put together, the two announcements suggest Mastercard is moving from “we support digital assets” language toward specific settlement use cases with branded instruments and defined network pathways.
The new announcement is a wrapper around an older build
Mastercard’s latest move makes more sense when viewed as strategic packaging around an existing build. The company has been laying this groundwork for years. In 2021, it rolled out a card program for cryptocurrency companies, aiming to simplify issuance and bring more crypto-linked payment products onto its rails.
That was an early sign that the company saw the risk of treating crypto as an external market to observe from a distance. It wanted to be the network used when crypto touched consumer payments.
Since then, Mastercard has expanded its digital-asset stack across multiple layers of the transaction chain. Its broader overview of digital asset services points to work across acceptance, card programs, settlement, identity, and compliance. Its network materials describe a system intended to connect financial institutions and businesses in tokenized transactions.
In plain English, Mastercard has been building payment plumbing for a world where some bank money and transaction settlements happen in blockchain form.
That is why the partner roster looks like a map of dependencies. A network trying to stay central in digital-dollar flows needs blockchains to host assets, custodians to hold them, compliance firms to screen them, banks to issue or support them, processors to route them, and merchant-facing infrastructure to put them to work in commerce.
The companies in Mastercard’s new program span those categories, making the list less a show of breadth than a map of function. It sketches the minimum coalition needed to keep on-chain money connected to off-chain commerce.
Mastercard is building the rails for digital dollars to settle, move, and reconcile behind the scenes while merchants, banks, and users continue to interact with familiar payment experiences. So, the visible consumer experience may change little even if the underlying money flows become more blockchain-native.
A shopper can still tap a card or approve a wallet transaction. A merchant can still see ordinary checkout flows. The real change happens in settlement, when the money actually lands, how fast it moves, whether it can move on weekends, and which intermediary controls the trust layer around that transfer.
SignalWhat it showsWhy it matters85+ partner programMastercard is coordinating banks, crypto firms, compliance vendors, custody providers, and processorsIt suggests a full-stack approach rather than a narrow card productSoFiUSD settlement announcementA named stablecoin is being tied to Mastercard network settlementIt is the clearest live-now proof point in the current source setPrior card and MTN workMastercard has already built pieces across issuance, acceptance, and tokenized transactionsThe new program looks like coordination around existing railsVisa stablecoin pushAnother major card network is also moving into stablecoin settlementThe competitive context makes the network race explicit
Stablecoins are the real prize because settlement is the real battleground
Mastercard’s own recent messaging points in that direction. In 2025, the company enabled stablecoins, including USDC, PYUSD, USDG, and FIUSD, on its network. It also announced end-to-end capabilities for stablecoin transactions, from wallets to checkouts, in a release focused on the movement of value across the payment chain rather than on crypto as an investment story.
That push covered wallet enablement, merchant acceptance, and settlement functionality. Read together, those materials point to a company trying to make digital-dollar movement usable inside the network, not merely adjacent to it.
The near-term use cases follow from that design. Remittances are one. Cross-border payouts are another. B2B transfers, supplier payments, treasury movement, and merchant settlement all fit the model. These are areas where 24/7 transfer capability, faster finality, and programmable conditions can have practical value even before consumers see a major change at checkout.
Tokenized deposits become relevant for the same reason. They are bank deposits issued in blockchain form, which makes them easier to route through programmable systems while keeping them tied to regulated institutions.
A crypto exchange can help distribute or interface with digital assets. A custody provider can hold them. A compliance vendor can screen counterparties and transactions. A banking partner can issue the money or support the fiat leg. A processor or network layer can move instructions and settle them into the existing merchant universe. Mastercard appears to want a seat at that intersection, where blockchain-native assets meet the trusted controls, rules, and acceptance footprint of traditional payments.
Visa’s recent actions are in alignment. In late 2025, Visa announced U.S. stablecoin settlement in a release centered on settlement integration. That suggests both major card networks have reached a similar conclusion: stablecoins are becoming credible rails for back-end money movement. Neither network appears willing to leave that territory open for banks, fintechs, or crypto infrastructure firms to own outright.
Still, the opportunity is real, but not fully mainstream yet.
The strongest reporting guardrail in this article is to separate gross on-chain volume from actual payment usage. A review from McKinsey, citing Artemis data, estimated annualized “actual stablecoin payments” at roughly $390 billion. That is a meaningful base, but it is much smaller than the most inflated readings of raw stablecoin transfer volume.
So stablecoins have not replaced card networks in commerce. Instead, they have become important enough in settlement and money movement that card networks are now building to contain the threat and capture the upside.
DefiLlama put total stablecoin market capitalization at about $309.0 billion. BVNK reported that 77% of surveyed crypto users would open a stablecoin wallet if their bank or fintech offered one, while 28% convert or spend stablecoins within 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 a pure payments number.
Taken together, those figures paint a clear picture: the market is already large enough to matter, but it is still early enough that control of the rails remains up for grabs.
If major retailers, large fintech stacks, processors, or bank consortia can move more value over stablecoin or tokenized-money systems, they may eventually reduce dependence on traditional card-settlement economics. Reporting from the Journal on Walmart and Amazon exploring stablecoins captured the direction of travel. Mastercard’s partner program can be read as a defensive response to that possibility. There’s no panic or pivoting. It is network defense.
The next proof points are straightforward.
Watch for more issuer settlement announcements, merchant settlement rollouts, bank stablecoin launches, tokenized-deposit pilots, and case studies tied to Mastercard’s Multi-Token Network.Watch for processors and acquirers moving recurring production settlement flows onto these rails. Most of all, watch for disclosed volume.
That is where we will see either things harden into a measurable shift in payment infrastructure or fade back into branding.
For now, Mastercard’s crypto partner program looks less like a broad endorsement of crypto and more like an attempt to shape where digital dollars travel next.
The company has published the ecosystem map. The harder question is whether the next wave of stablecoin settlement will keep using Mastercard’s network layers, or whether parts of the market will decide they no longer need them.




















