On March 3, SoFi Technologies and Mastercard unveiled their collaboration to integrate SoFiUSD as a payment settlement mechanism within Mastercard’s extensive global infrastructure.
Introduced in December, SoFiUSD comes from SoFi Bank N.A., which operates under OCC oversight as an insured financial institution. Complete 1:1 cash reserve backing ensures that each digital token corresponds directly to an actual US dollar.
According to SoFi, this positions SoFiUSD as the inaugural stablecoin launched by a federally chartered and deposit-insured US banking institution on an open, permissionless blockchain network. This represents a significant differentiator in an ecosystem filled with competitors operating under lighter regulatory frameworks.
The partnership allows SoFi Bank to settle its Mastercard-branded credit and debit card transactions using SoFiUSD. This provides immediate, practical application of the technology in live operations.
Galileo, the payments infrastructure division of SoFi, will extend this settlement capability to its network of banking partners and card-issuing clients across Mastercard’s platform. Given Galileo’s extensive fintech and financial institution clientele, adoption could scale rapidly.
A key advantage centers on availability. While conventional payment rails operate only during business hours, SoFiUSD supports continuous settlement around the clock, every day of the week.
Mastercard’s Multi-Token Network (MTN) will incorporate SoFiUSD alongside traditional fiat currencies, tokenized bank deposits, and additional digital assets. The MTN serves as Mastercard’s infrastructure for connecting legacy financial systems with emerging digital asset classes.
This marks another chapter in Mastercard’s digital currency journey. Last November, the payment giant collaborated with Thunes to broaden stablecoin wallet payout capabilities via Mastercard Move, facilitating near-instantaneous transfers to compliant stablecoin wallets.
Looking ahead, both organizations plan to investigate applications including international money transfers, corporate payment solutions, programmable treasury management tools, and card programs powered by stablecoins — all contingent on regulatory clearance and network compliance requirements.
According to SoFi CEO Anthony Noto, the partnership aims to deliver money movement that is “faster, cheaper, and safer,” positioning SoFiUSD as a settlement instrument for card issuers and payment processors worldwide.
Meanwhile, Mastercard’s primary competitor continues its own developments. Visa initiated stablecoin settlement testing for international transactions in September, deploying a pilot program utilizing Circle’s USDC and EURC tokens.
Visa subsequently broadened its stablecoin support to encompass four different tokens across four blockchain networks, with conversion capabilities spanning over 25 traditional currencies. By November, Visa rolled out direct stablecoin disbursements to digital wallets serving freelancers and marketplace platforms.
In a recent development, Quantoz Payments from the Netherlands achieved principal Visa member status, enabling the issuance of Visa-branded debit cards supported by regulated electronic money tokens throughout Europe.
The total stablecoin ecosystem reached approximately $311 billion in market capitalization at the time of publication, per DefiLlama data. Monthly transaction volume peaked at $969.9 billion during August 2025, with industry projections suggesting $1 trillion monthly volumes could arrive by December 2026.
Stablecoin creation in 2025 showed year-over-year doubling, while daily transaction flow across stablecoin networks now averages around $30 billion.
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