Mastercard launches crypto partner program with 85 companies to reshape global payments
The payments giant is betting big on stablecoins, assembling a coalition of crypto firms to build cross-border transfers, B2B payments, and global payouts.
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Add us on Google by Estefano Gomez Mar. 11, 2026Mastercard just assembled what amounts to a crypto Avengers team. The payments giant has launched a Crypto Partner Program that brings together more than 85 digital asset companies, all aimed at building infrastructure for cross-border transfers, business-to-business payments, and global payouts.
The move is Mastercard’s most aggressive step yet into the digital asset ecosystem, and it comes at a time when stablecoin transaction volumes are making traditional payment rails look quaint by comparison.
The numbers behind the push
Here’s why Mastercard isn’t just dabbling. Stablecoin transaction volumes hit $1.26 trillion in February 2026 alone. USDC accounted for roughly 70% of that activity, making it the dominant currency in a market that barely existed five years ago.
Annual stablecoin transfer volumes topped $27.6 trillion in 2025. To put that in perspective, that figure exceeds the combined transfer volumes of both Visa and Mastercard’s traditional networks. The thing that’s supposed to disrupt you is already bigger than you — unless you adapt.
Mastercard, to its credit, appears to have read the room. Stablecoin-linked card spending reached $4.5B in 2025, a 673% increase from the prior year. Business-to-business stablecoin payments now account for approximately $226B annually, marking a staggering 733% year-over-year growth.
Those aren’t incremental gains. That’s a market going vertical.
What the program actually does
The Crypto Partner Program isn’t just a badge and a press release. It’s built around Mastercard’s Multi-Token Network, or MTN — a platform that facilitates real-time settlement across multiple digital asset types.
In English: MTN is the plumbing that lets traditional banks and crypto companies move money on the same pipes. JPMorgan Chase is already connected through this network for stablecoin settlements, which tells you something about how seriously Wall Street is taking this infrastructure.
The 85-plus partners span the crypto industry’s food chain. Think exchanges, wallet providers, stablecoin issuers, and blockchain infrastructure firms. The goal is to create an interoperable ecosystem where a business in Lagos can pay a supplier in São Paulo using stablecoins, settled in seconds rather than the three-to-five days that traditional correspondent banking still demands.
Cross-border payments have been a pain point since, well, forever. The global remittance market alone is worth over $800B annually, and incumbents like Western Union and SWIFT have been charging fees that make airline baggage policies look generous. Mastercard sees stablecoins as the wedge to capture a meaningful share of that flow.
The B2B angle is arguably even more important. Businesses moving $226B annually through stablecoin channels represents real commercial adoption, not just speculation. When companies start using a technology for payroll and invoicing, that’s infrastructure — not a fad.
The competitive landscape is heating up
Mastercard isn’t operating in a vacuum. Visa hit a stablecoin settlement run rate of $3.5B by November 2025 and has expanded those services to over 40 countries. The two payment giants are essentially racing to become the default bridge between legacy finance and the crypto economy.
Meanwhile, the stablecoin market itself is fragmenting in interesting ways. Ripple’s RLUSD has exceeded $1B in circulation since its late 2024 launch. SoFi’s SoFiUSD crossed the $1B mark by March 2026, becoming the first stablecoin issued by a US nationally chartered bank. Circle’s USDC remains the heavyweight, but the competition is real and growing.
Regulatory tailwinds are helping everyone. The European Union’s MiCA framework has given institutional players the clarity they needed to deploy capital confidently. In the US, evolving stablecoin legislation is creating guardrails that make compliance officers slightly less anxious — which, in corporate America, is about as close to enthusiasm as you get.
Mastercard’s market capitalization sits around $457-464B as of March 2026. The company’s stock has weathered some turbulence over the past year, but investors appear to be pricing in the optionality that crypto integration provides. If stablecoin card spending grows to the $50-100B annual range within the next few years — which is where current trajectories point — that’s a meaningful new revenue stream layered on top of existing business.
What this means for investors and the broader market
Look, the significance here isn’t that Mastercard likes crypto now. It’s that Mastercard has decided crypto payments are a core business line worth organizing 85 partnerships around. That’s a fundamentally different posture than the tentative pilot programs we saw two years ago.
For crypto investors, this is a legitimacy signal that matters more than another Bitcoin ETF approval. When the company that processes billions of transactions annually builds dedicated infrastructure for digital assets, it validates the thesis that stablecoins are becoming a permanent layer of global finance.
The risk, of course, is execution. Assembling 85 partners sounds impressive, but coordinating them into a seamless payment experience is genuinely difficult. Interoperability between different blockchains, compliance with varying regulatory regimes across jurisdictions, and the sheer complexity of real-time settlement at scale — these are hard problems. Mastercard has the engineering muscle, but crypto integration has humbled more than a few legacy institutions.
There’s also the question of margin compression. If stablecoins make cross-border payments faster and cheaper, Mastercard can’t charge the same fees it currently earns on international transactions. The company is essentially betting that volume growth will more than offset lower per-transaction revenue. That math works until it doesn’t.
For traders, the immediate implication is that stablecoin liquidity is about to get another boost. More on-ramps and off-ramps through Mastercard’s network mean more capital flowing between fiat and crypto. Daily trading volumes on exchanges like Binance already averaged $65-75B throughout 2025. Deeper stablecoin integration with traditional payment networks could push that higher.
The competitive dynamic between Mastercard and Visa is also worth watching. When two $450B+ companies compete aggressively in a new market, the entire ecosystem tends to benefit. Better infrastructure, lower fees, and faster settlement times are all likely outcomes when these two are trying to outdo each other.
One more thing to monitor: the MTN’s institutional connections. JPMorgan’s involvement suggests this isn’t just a retail play. If major banks begin routing treasury operations through Mastercard’s stablecoin infrastructure, the transaction volumes could dwarf what we’re seeing from consumer card spending.
Bottom line: Mastercard’s 85-partner crypto program is the clearest sign yet that stablecoins are transitioning from crypto-native curiosity to core financial infrastructure. With $27.6 trillion in annual stablecoin transfers already surpassing traditional card networks, the payments giant isn’t disrupting itself out of idealism — it’s doing it because the alternative is irrelevance. The execution risk is real, but so is the opportunity.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Estefano Gomez. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.