Circle launched USDC Bridge on Friday, a native cross-chain transfer tool built on top of its existing Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol (CCTP). The goal is to make moving USDC between blockchains simpler and more transparent for everyday users.
Circle Launches Native $USDC Bridge For Direct Cross-Chain Transfers@Circle has officially launched the USDC Bridge, a native infrastructure designed to move $USDC seamlessly across multiple blockchains.
The system utilizes a burn-and-mint mechanism to ensure transfers are… pic.twitter.com/AimmDzccdf
— BSCN (@BSCNews) April 17, 2026
CCTP was first introduced in April 2023. It already handles over $500 million in USDC transfers daily and was updated with a full V2 revamp last year.
The new bridge gives users a clean interface to interact with CCTP directly. Previously, developers and technical users were the main ones using CCTP — the new UI opens it up to a wider audience.
USDC Bridge uses a 1:1 burn-and-mint process. USDC is burned on the source chain and minted natively on the destination chain, meaning no wrapped tokens are involved.
Fees are shown before a transaction is confirmed. Destination gas is handled automatically by the protocol, removing one of the more confusing steps for newer users.
A reporter at The Block tested the service and found it cost around $0.20 to move $20 worth of USDC from Ethereum mainnet to Optimism. Fees vary depending on the transaction setup.
Circle does not charge its own fee for using CCTP. Standard gas fees on the source and destination chains still apply, and “fast” transactions may carry a higher cost.
At launch, USDC Bridge supports at least 17 EVM-compatible blockchains. These include Ethereum, Avalanche, Arbitrum, Base, Optimism, Polygon, Sonic, Monad, Sei, and World Network.
CCTP itself supports a broader set of chains, including Solana, Sui, and Aptos. However, USDC Bridge appears limited to EVM-compatible chains at this stage, leaving non-EVM chains out for now.
Circle issues USDC natively on dozens of chains and on select applications, including Polymarket. USDC remains the second-largest stablecoin by market cap.
Cross-chain bridges have long been a friction point in crypto. Confusing interfaces, unclear fees, and multiple steps have slowed adoption — particularly for newer users. Circle is positioning USDC Bridge as a cleaner solution to that problem.
The launch comes days after Circle was hit with a class action lawsuit. Filed Wednesday, the suit relates to roughly $230 million in USDC that moved through CCTP following the Drift Protocol exploit on April 1.
More than 100 members are part of the action, represented by law firm Mira Gibb. Circle is accused of aiding and abetting conversion and negligence for not freezing the funds. Damages are to be determined at trial.
Circle has not yet publicly responded to the lawsuit in detail.
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