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What Revolut’s $1.2B Onchain Volume on Polygon Signals for Global Payments

On March 26, 2026 by voice

A few months ago, I was speaking with a fintech team about their cross-border payment flows. High volume, fully compliant, nothing unusual.

Even then, transfers were taking days. Fees were layered and hard to unpack. And visibility into where funds sat in the system was limited.

This is not a fringe problem. This is how global payments still work.

Now compare that to what is happening today.

A Revolut user in Europe can send USDC or USDT and have it settle in seconds. No intermediaries. No waiting. No hidden spreads quietly eating into the transaction. The experience feels exactly the same on the surface. Open the app, send money, done.

But underneath, something fundamental has changed. That money is moving onchain.

Revolut recently crossed $1.2 billion in cumulative transaction volume on Polygon. Not in a test environment. Not as an experiment. In production, with real users, at real scale. And most of those users have no idea.

That is what makes this moment so important.

For years, the industry has tried to define what mass adoption looks like. Wallet counts, token holders, total value locked. But those metrics miss the point. Adoption is not when users consciously choose blockchain. It is when they do not have to.

Revolut has more than 65 million users. They are not crypto natives. They are not thinking about chains, gas fees, or settlement layers. They are trying to move money quickly and cheaply.

What they are experiencing now is a better system. Faster settlement. Lower costs. Global access.

What they are not seeing is that the underlying infrastructure has been completely rewritten. This is how systems change. Quietly at first, then all at once. Payments were always going to be the entry point.

Cross-border money movement is one of the largest and most broken systems in finance. The global remittance market moves more than $900 billion every year, yet the average cost of sending money is still over 6 percent. In many cases, traditional banks charge more than 14 percent.

That is not just inefficiency. It is friction embedded in the global economy. For a long time, we accepted this because there was no viable alternative.

Now there is.

Stablecoins combined with scalable blockchain infrastructure are not just improving payments. They are redefining them. Settlement that used to take days now happens in seconds. Costs that used to be measured in percentages are now measured in fractions of a cent.

On Polygon, average transaction costs are near zero, and settlement happens in about two seconds. That changes the economics entirely.

Revolut’s integration makes this real. Users in the UK and across the European Economic Area can move stablecoins instantly, with 1:1 conversion and no hidden FX spreads. What used to be a fragmented, multi-step process is now a single action.

And importantly, nothing about the user experience feels different.

That is the breakthrough.

For years, one of the biggest barriers to institutional adoption was complexity. If you wanted to build onchain, you needed to stitch together custody providers, liquidity partners, onramps, compliance layers, and multiple integrations. It was not just a technical challenge. It was an operational one.

What is changing now is the emergence of integrated infrastructure.

Polygon’s Open Money Stack is a reflection of that shift. Instead of navigating a fragmented system of vendors and APIs, institutions can plug into a single stack that handles wallets, liquidity, on and off ramps, and settlement.

That is why a company like Revolut can move from zero to over $1.2 billion in onchain volume. Not because they suddenly decided to experiment with crypto, but because the infrastructure reached a point where it made sense to deploy at scale.

At the same time, regulation is no longer sitting on the sidelines.

Revolut’s selection by the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority to participate in its stablecoin sandbox is a signal that the regulatory conversation is evolving. A pound-denominated stablecoin, tested within a regulated framework, alongside billions in onchain transaction volume, is not theoretical progress.

It is the alignment between infrastructure and regulation. And that is what unlocks the next phase.

There is a tendency in crypto to look for dramatic turning points. Moments where everything changes overnight. That is not how this transition is happening.

What we are seeing instead is a gradual replacement of the underlying rails. First, at the backend, where users do not notice. Then, at the edges, where the benefits become impossible to ignore.

Eventually, the old system does not disappear. It just becomes irrelevant.

Revolut crossing $1.2 billion on Polygon is not the finish line. It is an early signal that this replacement is already underway. The most important part is not the number itself. It is what the number represents.

Real users. Real volume. Real businesses. All operating onchain without needing to think about it. That is the shift. If you are building in crypto, this should change how you think about the future.

The next wave of adoption will not come from people caring more about blockchain. It will come from people needing to care less.

Better products win. Faster, cheaper, more reliable systems win. Infrastructure that disappears into the background wins.

Everything else is noise. What Revolut is showing us is that the transition is no longer hypothetical.

The rails are already changing. And once users experience a system that settles instantly, globally, and at near-zero cost, there is no reason to go back.

The post What Revolut’s $1.2B Onchain Volume on Polygon Signals for Global Payments appeared first on BeInCrypto.

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