Quantoz Payments has secured direct Visa membership that lets it issue virtual debit cards tied to regulated stablecoin style e money tokens across Europe.
Dutch payments firm Quantoz Payments B.V. entered a partnership with Visa that makes it a direct Visa principal member. That status enables Quantoz to issue virtual Visa debit cards, and to sponsor card programs for other fintech platforms using its regulated digital money rails.
The biggest change is structural. With principal membership, Quantoz can now operate as a direct issuer on the Visa network instead of relying on intermediaries. It also gains the ability to support other platforms as a BIN sponsor, a role that can simplify card launches for smaller fintechs that do not want the cost and complexity of direct network membership.
Arnoud Star Busmann, CEO of Quantoz Payments, commented:
Visa framed the partnership as part of its wider focus on innovation and trusted payment experiences. Jos van de Kerkhof, Visa Country Manager for the Netherlands, said:
The planned product is a virtual Visa debit card that can be used online, in physical stores, and through mobile wallets like Apple Pay and Google Pay wherever Visa is accepted. The idea is straightforward: a customer balance held with Quantoz becomes the spendable balance on the Visa card. That gives fintech apps and platforms a way to make regulated digital money feel like a normal daily payment tool.
Reports also point to three Quantoz tokens that can sit behind the card balance: USDQ, EURQ, and EURD. These are described as regulated e money tokens designed to operate under European rules for electronic money. Unlike many crypto card setups that require conversion into fiat before spending, this model is presented as a direct connection between compliant token balances and the card network.
Quantoz operates with an Electronic Money Institution license from the Dutch central bank. Under the European Union framework for crypto assets, electronic money tokens are expected to maintain one to one reserves and follow safeguarding and transparency standards.
Quantoz has also described how its reserves are structured. According to the company, reserves are held one to one in safeguarded accounts through a bankruptcy remote foundation structure. It also says it must maintain at least an additional 2 percent reserve buffer on its balance sheet. Those details matter because they draw a line between regulated digital money products and unregulated stablecoins.
Neither Quantoz nor Visa disclosed a launch date for the first card programs. No fintech partners were named either, even though the embedded issuance and BIN sponsorship angle suggests third party rollouts are a major part of the strategy. Quantoz said technical integration is underway, and the initial focus remains the European market.
I see this as a real step toward making stablecoins practical, not just tradable. In my experience, the biggest blocker is not user demand, it is distribution and compliance. If Quantoz can handle the regulatory and operational work while letting fintechs ship branded Visa cards quickly, that is a powerful wedge into everyday payments. I found the reserve and buffer details especially important because trust is the whole game in regulated digital money. If the execution matches the promise, this could be one of the cleaner bridges between token balances and normal card spending that Europe has seen so far.
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