Visa Adds Polygon to Stablecoin Settlement as Card Payments Go 24/7Visa has added Polygon as a settlement chain in its stablecoin program, giving fintech issuers a new way to settle card payment flows beyond standard banking hours.
While card payments feel instant to users, settlement for issuers still depends on bank calendars, cut-off times, weekends, and holidays. This creates a working-capital cost for fintechs, especially program managers and sponsor-bank-backed issuers with large card volumes.
Polygon’s addition gives those firms access to stablecoin settlement on a chain already used for high-volume USD payment activity.
Weekend Settlement Creates a Capital Cost
Card networks operate on real-time authorization and delayed settlement. A customer pays with a card immediately, while the funds between issuers, acquirers, and payment networks often move later through fiat systems such as ACH, Fedwire, SEPA, or local payment providers.
Fintech issuers usually cover this timing difference through prefunding or collateral.
With prefunding, an issuer places expected weekend volume into a Visa-held account before banks close. Visa can draw from the balance while banks are offline.
With collateral, an issuer maintains a standing balance for Visa to use if settlement fails. This capital sits aside for risk coverage instead of supporting daily operations or growth.
Large banks can often avoid these requirements due to stronger credit profiles. Fintech issuers usually absorb the cost.
Stablecoin Settlement Gives Issuers a Faster Route
Polygon gives Visa partners a route to settle in stablecoins during weekends and holidays.
Instead of waiting for fiat systems to reopen, an issuer can settle card flows in stablecoins on Polygon while payment activity continues. Settlement can complete in seconds, with finality after confirmed blocks.
This can reduce the need for large weekend prefunding balances. It can also help collateral sit closer to current exposure rather than a larger weekend estimate.
For stablecoin-native fintechs, the model is straightforward. Companies already holding USDC or other supported stablecoins can use those balances for Visa settlement.
For fiat-native fintechs, the process needs conversion, custody, settlement, and reporting. Polygon is positioning its Open Money Stack around this full workflow.
Open Money Stack Connects Fiat and Stablecoin Settlement
Polygon’s Open Money Stack is designed for fintechs entering stablecoin payments without rebuilding their operations.
Polygon handles the on-chain settlement leg. Polygon Wallets support custody on the issuer side, with coverage across more than 50 chains. Coinme, a licensed fiat on/off-ramp network with money transmitter licenses across 48 US states, supports fiat-to-stablecoin conversion.
Polygon Labs’ Coinme acquisition remains subject to regulatory approval.
The goal is a single operating flow. Dollars can convert into stablecoins, settle to Visa, and reconcile with existing treasury systems after the weekend.
For issuers, this reduces the complexity of adopting stablecoin settlement. It also places Polygon closer to the back-office payment flows where fintechs feel the cost of delayed settlement most.
Polygon Builds Its Case With Stablecoin Volume
Polygon’s case rests on payment activity, cost, and performance.
According to data cited by Polygon Labs from Allium and Dune, Polygon recently handled a large share of USD stablecoin transfers, including USDC activity. The source material also points to throughput above 2,600 transactions per second, roughly five-second finality, and lower fee volatility for institutional payment use.
Those points are relevant for card settlement. Payment firms need predictable execution during peak periods, weekends, and holidays. Low fees alone are insufficient when settlement flows require reliability and clean reconciliation.
Polygon’s existing work with firms such as Stripe, Revolut, Mastercard, BlackRock, and Flutterwave also strengthens its position as a payments enabler rather than a standalone blockchain network.
Final Thoughts
Visa adding Polygon to its stablecoin settlement program is a step in the right direction for fintech issuers.
The strongest benefit sits in treasury operations. Card payments already happen around the clock, while settlement still follows bank calendars in many markets. Stablecoins give issuers a way to close part of this timing problem.
For Polygon, the integration adds another proof point for stablecoin payments. For fintech issuers, it offers a possible reduction in idle capital, weekend prefunding pressure, and settlement delay.
The post Visa Adds Polygon to Stablecoin Settlement as Card Payments Go 24/7 appeared first on BeInCrypto.
read the full story
Visa has added Polygon as a settlement chain in its stablecoin program, giving fintech issuers a new way to settle card payment flows beyond standard banking hours.
While card payments feel instant to users, settlement for issuers still depends on bank calendars, cut-off times, weekends, and holidays. This creates a working-capital cost for fintechs, especially program managers and sponsor-bank-backed issuers with large card volumes.
Polygon’s addition gives those firms access to stablecoin settlement on a chain already used for high-volume USD payment activity.
Weekend Settlement Creates a Capital Cost
Card networks operate on real-time authorization and delayed settlement. A customer pays with a card immediately, while the funds between issuers, acquirers, and payment networks often move later through fiat systems such as ACH, Fedwire, SEPA, or local payment providers.
Fintech issuers usually cover this timing difference through prefunding or collateral.
With prefunding, an issuer places expected weekend volume into a Visa-held account before banks close. Visa can draw from the balance while banks are offline.
With collateral, an issuer maintains a standing balance for Visa to use if settlement fails. This capital sits aside for risk coverage instead of supporting daily operations or growth.
Large banks can often avoid these requirements due to stronger credit profiles. Fintech issuers usually absorb the cost.
Stablecoin Settlement Gives Issuers a Faster Route
Polygon gives Visa partners a route to settle in stablecoins during weekends and holidays.
Instead of waiting for fiat systems to reopen, an issuer can settle card flows in stablecoins on Polygon while payment activity continues. Settlement can complete in seconds, with finality after confirmed blocks.
This can reduce the need for large weekend prefunding balances. It can also help collateral sit closer to current exposure rather than a larger weekend estimate.
For stablecoin-native fintechs, the model is straightforward. Companies already holding USDC or other supported stablecoins can use those balances for Visa settlement.
For fiat-native fintechs, the process needs conversion, custody, settlement, and reporting. Polygon is positioning its Open Money Stack around this full workflow.
Open Money Stack Connects Fiat and Stablecoin Settlement
Polygon’s Open Money Stack is designed for fintechs entering stablecoin payments without rebuilding their operations.
Polygon handles the on-chain settlement leg. Polygon Wallets support custody on the issuer side, with coverage across more than 50 chains. Coinme, a licensed fiat on/off-ramp network with money transmitter licenses across 48 US states, supports fiat-to-stablecoin conversion.
Polygon Labs’ Coinme acquisition remains subject to regulatory approval.
The goal is a single operating flow. Dollars can convert into stablecoins, settle to Visa, and reconcile with existing treasury systems after the weekend.
For issuers, this reduces the complexity of adopting stablecoin settlement. It also places Polygon closer to the back-office payment flows where fintechs feel the cost of delayed settlement most.
Polygon Builds Its Case With Stablecoin Volume
Polygon’s case rests on payment activity, cost, and performance.
According to data cited by Polygon Labs from Allium and Dune, Polygon recently handled a large share of USD stablecoin transfers, including USDC activity. The source material also points to throughput above 2,600 transactions per second, roughly five-second finality, and lower fee volatility for institutional payment use.
Those points are relevant for card settlement. Payment firms need predictable execution during peak periods, weekends, and holidays. Low fees alone are insufficient when settlement flows require reliability and clean reconciliation.
Polygon’s existing work with firms such as Stripe, Revolut, Mastercard, BlackRock, and Flutterwave also strengthens its position as a payments enabler rather than a standalone blockchain network.
Final Thoughts
Visa adding Polygon to its stablecoin settlement program is a step in the right direction for fintech issuers.
The strongest benefit sits in treasury operations. Card payments already happen around the clock, while settlement still follows bank calendars in many markets. Stablecoins give issuers a way to close part of this timing problem.
For Polygon, the integration adds another proof point for stablecoin payments. For fintech issuers, it offers a possible reduction in idle capital, weekend prefunding pressure, and settlement delay.
The post Visa Adds Polygon to Stablecoin Settlement as Card Payments Go 24/7 appeared first on BeInCrypto.
read the full storyCrypto Youtubers Predict Bitcoin Bottom and Bear Market Cycle
Carl Runefelt and David Wulschner say Bitcoin bottomed at $60K, citing missing euphoria and steady…
Are Satoshi’s 600,000 BTC At Risk? Unveiling The Hard Fork That Targets Bitcoin
On-chain sleuth Tyler has drawn attention to a Bitcoin hard fork proposal amid the quantum threat to…
Riot Platforms Stock Pops as Bitcoin Miner Reports Data Center Revenue, Doubled AMD Deal
The Bitcoin mining company's pivot to AI infrastructure hosting generated its first data center…
MoonPay Launches Debit Mastercard That Lets AI Agents Pay With Stablecoins
MoonPay’s new debit Mastercard lets autonomous AI agents spend stablecoins at any online…
Bitcoin takes another aim at $80,000 as stocks rise, oil drops on Iran optimism
The crypto asset rose nearly 3% over the past 24 hours.
Bitcoin Halted at $80K as US Fed and ECB Hold Interest Rates Steady: Your Weekly Crypto Recap
The ECB followed the Fed's example a day later, but it hinted about a hike in June.
Justin Sun: Why Crypto Cards Are the ‘Next Evolution’ for Stablecoin Distribution
Tron founder Justin Sun has declared that crypto cards are the next structural phase in how digital…
Bitcoin reclaims the $78k handle on Gate
Bitcoin has reclaimed $78,000 on Gate’s BTC/USDT pair, extending a rebound from $76,000 and…
Bitcoin open interest jumps nearly 6% as traders re‑lever into futures
Bitcoin futures open interest has climbed 5.92% to $57.621b, signaling traders are re‑levering…
Bitcoin ETF Inflows Hit $2B in April as BTC Rally Fuels Investor Appetite
Bitcoin exchange-traded funds in the U.S. pulled in roughly $2 billion during April. That’s…
Bitcoin is repeating a 2022 pattern – and this time we’re missing the buyers for what came next
CryptoQuant's latest Apr. 30 read shows that perpetual futures are driving Bitcoin's recovery, while…
XRP Disrupts Korean Banking With High-Compliance KRW Stablecoin Breakthrough
Korea's massive XRP volume moves on-chain as Hana Financial TI validates a new KRW stablecoin…
Institutional demand to drive bitcoin market cap to $16 trillion by 2030: Ark Invest
The figure implies a sharp increase in the bitcoin price.
SHIB Joins BTC, ETH, XRP, SOL in Japan Lending Push via SBI VC Trade
Shiba Inu's use case expands in Japan with new lending opportunity.
OpenAI Foundation CFO Joins $1 Billion XRP Treasury; Bitcoin's Worst Case by May 2026 Detailed by Expert Trader; $183 Million 'Capital Flight' Hits Ethereum ETFs Amid DeFi Hack Wave - Morning Crypto Report
OpenAI CFO joins XRPN: will XRP become the currency of AI? DonAlt expects BTC "chop" at $77,000,…
Bitcoin May rally ahead? $79K breakout could decide
Bitcoin trades near $77K as analysts watch $79K resistance, ETF flows, and exchange inflows for the…
Bhutan’s Bitcoin sell-offs hit $200 mln: Is the country letting go of its BTC reserve?
Despite Bitcoin's persistent dumping, broader holding by nations rose by 26%.
Bitcoin Closes April Up 12% as Strategy's MSTR Posts First Positive Month Since July
Bitcoin rallied 12% in April as Strategy added $4.1 billion in BTC, but on-chain data suggests gains…
Analysis: Bitcoin’s 46-day funding drain set the stage for this week’s wipeout
Bitcoin funding rates stayed negative for 46 days, the longest since 2023, forcing shorts to pay…