SoFi and Mastercard are expanding their partnership to let SoFiUSD work as a settlement currency across Mastercard’s global payments network.
SoFi Technologies, Inc. announced an enhanced partnership with Mastercard to enable SoFiUSD as a settlement option across Mastercard’s global payments network. The companies said they will explore how card issuers and acquirers can settle card transactions using SoFiUSD, with a focus on faster money movement for areas like cross-border remittances and business to business payments.
Stablecoins have long been used in crypto trading and on chain transfers, but this partnership signals a more ambitious goal: bringing a regulated, bank issued stablecoin into the settlement layer of a major card network.
SoFiUSD is described as SoFi’s fully reserved U.S. dollar stablecoin, and the company says it is issued by SoFi Bank, N.A. as an insured depository institution. In the company statement, SoFi also positioned SoFiUSD as the first stablecoin offered by a U.S. nationally chartered and insured deposit bank on a public, permissionless blockchain.
The practical idea here is simple. Instead of relying only on traditional settlement processes, Mastercard participants could explore using a stablecoin that can move value continuously, potentially improving timing and liquidity management for merchants, banks, and payment providers.
Mastercard and SoFi said they will explore how issuers and acquirers can settle card based transactions using SoFiUSD. The two most highlighted use cases were cross-border remittances and business to business money transfers, where delays can increase costs and complicate treasury operations.
SoFi Bank is also expected to settle its own credit and debit transactions powered by the Mastercard network using SoFiUSD. If that happens at meaningful scale, it becomes more than a pilot idea. It becomes a real test of whether a bank issued stablecoin can reduce friction in traditional payment plumbing.
SoFiUSD is also expected to be supported across the Mastercard Multi Token Network, Mastercard’s digital asset platform aimed at connecting traditional money with digital assets. The companies said this integration aims to support interoperability across fiat currencies, stablecoins, and tokenized deposits, while delivering greater choice.
They also said they will explore additional interoperability use cases, including programmable treasury applications and other payout and money movement scenarios, subject to regulatory considerations and Mastercard network rules.
One of the most important distribution points in this announcement is Galileo, SoFi’s technology platform. Galileo is expected to be among the first to offer its payment card clients and their issuing banks the choice to settle transactions in SoFiUSD.
That matters because it could lower the barrier for fintechs and smaller banks that want to test stablecoin settlement, without rebuilding core systems from scratch. If stablecoin settlement becomes a checkbox feature inside existing issuing infrastructure, adoption could accelerate quickly.
Anthony Noto, CEO of SoFi said:
Sherri Haymond, Global Head of Digital Commercialization, Mastercard said:
SoFi and Mastercard pointed to rising stablecoin activity and growing consumer interest. The company statement cited that roughly $30 billion is transacted per day, stablecoin issuance in 2025 doubled from the prior year, and more than half of people with crypto holdings say they have held stablecoins in the past 12 months. It also said more than 75% would open a stablecoin wallet if their bank or fintech app offered one.
Mastercard’s scale adds another layer of significance. The provided coverage notes Mastercard processed nearly $11 trillion in volume during 2025 and operates across more than 200 countries, giving any settlement upgrade a potentially massive runway.
I found this move important because it pushes stablecoins out of the crypto corner and into the part of finance that actually runs commerce. In my experience, the hardest part of modern payments is not the swipe. It is the settlement, the timing, and the liquidity stress that comes with it. If Mastercard and SoFi can make stablecoin settlement work inside real card flows, it could become a practical 24 hour tool for treasury teams, not just a token for traders. The big test will be execution, compliance, and whether issuers and acquirers see enough benefit to change behavior.
The post Mastercard Integrates SoFiUSD in Major Push for Stablecoin Payments appeared first on CoinLaw.


