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Blockchain Article

Dollar Payments Are Leaving Legacy Rails for Polygon

On April 1, 2026 by voice

A few months ago, I was sitting with a payments executive who had spent the better part of a year evaluating blockchain. It was the usual story at first. Internal debates, risk assessments, small pilots that were treated more like science experiments than real infrastructure.

Then something changed.

He told me that at a certain point, the question inside his company stopped being “should we use this?” and quietly became “why aren’t we already using this everywhere we can?” Not because of hype, but because the systems they were testing were faster, cheaper, and more flexible than what they had been relying on for years.

That moment is now happening across the industry, and the data is starting to reflect it.

In March alone, Polygon processed 178 million USD stablecoin transactions, including 42.7 million in a single week. Those numbers are easy to read past, but they represent something much bigger than raw activity. They point to a growing share of real dollar payments moving onto new rails that are fundamentally different from the legacy systems they are beginning to replace.

For decades, global payments have run on infrastructure like ACH in the US, which still processes around 31 million transactions per day. It works, but it was not built for a world that is always on, globally connected, and increasingly automated. What we are seeing now is not just incremental improvement. It is a parallel system emerging alongside it, one that operates with fewer constraints and opens up entirely new possibilities.

Polygon has become one of the places where this shift is most visible, not because it set out to be a payments network in the traditional sense, but because it has quietly become the environment where many of these new flows actually work in production.

You can see that in how companies are already using it. Revolut, now one of the largest fintech platforms in the world with 50 million customers, has processed over 1.2 billion dollars on Polygon. Tazapay cleared 687 million in a single month. In total, 2.3 trillion dollars has moved through the network. These are not edge cases or isolated pilots. They are real businesses moving real money, at scale.

What is even more telling is how this momentum has started to converge.

In the first quarter of 2026, several of the largest players in payments made similar infrastructure decisions at nearly the same time. Stripe introduced a new protocol for autonomous AI agent payments and chose stablecoins on Polygon as the settlement layer. Mastercard expanded its integration, and that decision showed up almost immediately in network activity. Visa and Google are building toward the same direction.

These were not coordinated moves. They were independent decisions, made by different companies, all arriving at the same conclusion about where payments infrastructure is going.

Polygon’s role in this is not accidental. It sits at the intersection of cost efficiency, scalability, and composability in a way that makes these use cases viable. Stablecoins can move quickly and cheaply. Applications can build on top of each other. New types of transactions, especially those driven by software and AI, can happen without needing to rebuild the system each time.

That last point is starting to matter more than people realize.

We are beginning to see the early stages of AI-driven payments, where software agents transact with each other directly. Polygon is already leading in what is becoming a key signal of that future, with 358,000 weekly transactions tied to organic AI agent activity and 1.2 million dollars in volume in a single week. These numbers are still early, but they show how quickly new behaviors can emerge when the underlying infrastructure allows for it.

At the same time, the broader market is catching up. Polygon captured 22.1 percent of global USD stablecoin transaction market share in March, surpassing BNB Chain for the first time. On USDC specifically, it now accounts for 46 percent of all transfers globally, with significantly more volume than the next largest chain. By the end of the month, its weekly transfer share had reached 35.5 percent.

Those are not just milestones. They are signals of where activity is concentrating as the system evolves.

When you take all of this together, a pattern emerges that is difficult to ignore. The movement of dollars onto blockchain rails is no longer a future narrative or a niche trend. It is happening now, driven by real demand and reinforced by the decisions of the largest players in the industry.

And like that conversation I had a few months ago, the shift is not happening through some dramatic, singular moment. It is happening quietly, then all at once. One team decides to move faster. One product goes live. One integration turns into sustained volume. Then suddenly, the question is no longer whether this works.

It is how much of the system is going to move, and how quickly.

The payments industry has spent years asking if blockchain would become part of its infrastructure. That question has effectively been answered.

What matters now is who recognizes the shift early enough to build for it, and who ends up reacting to it after the fact.

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