Mastercard announced a global Crypto Partner Program designed to increase the adoption of digital assets in traditional payments. It connects over 85 crypto exchanges, fintechs, banks, and blockchain developers, including Binance, Circle, Ripple, Gemini, PayPal, and Paxos.
Mastercard aims to connect traditional payment infrastructure with a new blockchain-based financial ecosystem, targeting cross-border remittances, business-to-business transfers, gig economy payouts, and corporate settlements.
Mastercard focuses on integrating blockchain programmability with its existing payment ecosystem. The company’s network already processes around 250 million transactions daily across over 210 countries.
Through the new initiative, Mastercard plans to enable enterprises to use stablecoin-based settlement and blockchain infrastructure while maintaining compatibility with traditional card networks.
Partner companies collectively serve over 400 million users and process more than $4 trillion in annual transaction volume, providing a significant base for the integration of digital assets.
The initiative also targets large global payment markets. For example, cross-border remittances exceed $190 trillion annually, and gig economy platforms process roughly $455 billion in payouts each year.
The implementation of blockchain-based payment systems will reduce payment friction. The traditional remittances charge an average fee of 6.5% for each transaction. Blockchain systems can lower the cost to around 0.3%.
The average cost of international B2B wire transfers reaches $45 per transaction, and on-chain settlement systems can reduce this expense to close to zero.
Stablecoin-based systems provide settlement services that operate in near real-time. This gets rid of the waiting times that come with standard banking procedures.
The introduction of blockchain settlement systems could reduce FX costs by up to 90%. It will also improve capital efficiency and reduce dependence on the $27 trillion nostro account network used for cross-border liquidity.
The program relies on a standardized technical architecture designed for regulated financial environments. Key components include:
ISO 20022 messaging for cross-border transaction interoperability
ERC-3643 token standards for compliant digital assets
Chainlink oracle infrastructure for off-chain data verification
Mastercard’s Multi-Token Network for cross-chain settlement
Security measures such as zero-knowledge proofs and runtime verification systems are also being incorporated to enhance privacy and reduce risks with smart contracts.
Also Read: Florida Stablecoin Bill Signals New Rules for Crypto Payment Issuer
Several pilot projects are already underway with large corporations, including Walmart, Uber, Airbnb, and IBM.
These trials focus on real-world applications such as supplier payments, driver payouts, host earnings, and invoice settlement for enterprises.
Mastercard expects early deployments to expand gradually, with broader production-scale integration anticipated around 2027.
Analysts estimate the program could generate $500 billion in stablecoin card transaction volume by 2028, potentially creating $50 billion in annual interchange revenue and delivering over $120 billion in cost savings across payment systems.
By focusing on enterprise integration and multi-token settlement, Mastercard is positioning itself competitively against other global networks, including Visa, American Express, and UnionPay.