Visa Stablecoin Expands Across Multiple Blockchains in 2026
Visa has taken a major step in blockchain adoption. As of January 2026, the payments giant now operates a full-scale global stablecoin settlement system across multiple blockchains. This move shows that traditional finance is no longer testing blockchain technology. Instead, it is actively using it at scale.
VISA BUILDS MULTI-CHAIN STABLECOIN RAILS ; $ETH AT THE CORE
As of January 2026, Visa has moved far beyond pilot programs, operating a full-scale global stablecoin settlement system across multiple blockchains.
Ethereum remains the core layer for security and deep liquidity,… pic.twitter.com/398ntYQZxc
— CryptosRus (@CryptosR_Us) January 31, 2026
The system processes more than $3.5 billion in annual settlement volume, making it one of the largest real-world blockchain deployments by a traditional financial institution.
Ethereum Remains at the Core
Ethereum continues to play a central role in Visa’s strategy. Visa uses Ethereum for high-value and high-security transactions because of its strong security and deep liquidity.
At the same time, Visa does not rely on Ethereum alone. Instead, it has adopted a multi-chain approach to improve speed, cost efficiency, and flexibility. This allows Visa to match each blockchain with the type of transaction it handles best.
Visa Assigns Clear Roles to Each Blockchain
Visa currently settles stablecoin payments across four blockchains: Ethereum, Solana, Stellar, and Avalanche.
Ethereum handles transactions that require maximum security. Meanwhile, Solana and Avalanche support fast, institutional-grade settlements where speed matters most. Stellar, on the other hand, focuses on enterprise use cases and cross-border payments.
By spreading activity across several networks, Visa avoids congestion and improves reliability. As a result, the system can support global payment needs more efficiently.
Visa Eyes Arc Blockchain for Payments
Looking ahead, Visa plans to go even further. The company is a design partner on Arc, a new Layer 1 blockchain built specifically for payments by Circle. Arc is still in testnet, but Visa plans to run a validator and settle USDC directly on the network once it launches.
This step could speed up enterprise payments and reduce costs. It also shows Visa’s long-term commitment to blockchain-based settlement.
From Experiments to Real Deployment
Overall, Visa’s stablecoin progress marks a clear shift for traditional finance. Banks and payment firms are no longer running small pilots. Instead, they are deploying blockchain systems in real-world operations.
While faster blockchains continue to grow, Ethereum still anchors the system due to its trust and liquidity. Together, this multi-chain setup highlights how blockchain is becoming a core part of global payments in 2026.
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