Visa and Bridge Expand Stablecoin Payments to 100 Countries
A new stablecoin-linked Visa card across 100 countries will allow travelers to spend digital assets directly at merchants, reducing the need for constant currency conversions.
Visa and Bridge Expand Stablecoin Payments to 100 Countries
Visa and Bridge are scaling their stablecoin-linked card program to over 100 countries by the end of 2026. This expansion allows users to spend stablecoin balances directly at more than 175 million Visa merchants worldwide. The system converts digital assets like USDC and USDT into local fiat currency instantly at the point of sale.
The program is currently active in 18 countries, with a heavy presence in Latin American markets like Mexico, Brazil, and Argentina. The upcoming rollout targets major hubs across Europe, Asia Pacific, Africa, and the Middle East. Because Bridge is now a Stripe-owned company with a US national bank charter, the platform provides a more regulated bridge between on-chain assets and traditional retail spending.
Who it affects
This development is a significant win for digital nomads, expats, and long-term travelers who earn in crypto or want to avoid the friction of traditional banking. It eliminates the need to manually transfer funds to local bank accounts or pay 3% foreign transaction fees on every coffee or hotel stay.
Remote workers can manage their global spending from a single digital wallet without worrying about local currency volatility. While the technology is a private innovation rather than a government mandate, it offers a functional alternative to traditional cross-border banking for the nomad news community.
What to do
To use this service, you need a compatible self-custody wallet like MetaMask or Phantom. Fintech providers and neobanks use the Bridge API to issue these virtual Visa cards, which you can then add to digital wallets like Apple Pay or Google Pay.
- Ensure your wallet holds supported stablecoins such as USDC or USDT.
- Complete the KYC/AML verification required by your specific card issuer.
- Check for any platform-specific issuance fees or monthly limits.
- Once funded, you can tap and pay at any merchant that accepts Visa.
Check our country guides for destination-specific details on where digital payments are most widely accepted.
