Visa has reached an agreement with Stripe’s fintech subsidiary Bridge to roll out stablecoin-settled payment cards to more than 100 countries by the end of 2026. According to Tokenpost’s report, the two companies have already launched in 18 Latin American countries, covering markets such as Argentina, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, Peru, and Chile, with Asia-Pacific, Africa, and the Middle East next in line. This means Visa is genuinely wiring stablecoins into its clearing backend rather than treating them as just “a balance on a card face” — merchants still receive fiat, while what gets debited behind the card is stablecoin.
Editorial take: this strengthens the backend, not your specific card
Let’s be clear from the start: Bridge plays the role of a settlement layer, not a card issuer. What it does is convert stablecoins (mainly USDC, with some USDT support) into fiat at the edge of the Visa network to complete merchant settlement. So what this news actually strengthens is the Visa network’s capacity to accommodate stablecoin settlement — it does not directly raise limits or cut fees for any specific card.
For users of USDT cards running on Visa BINs, this is a structural positive: as Visa itself turns stablecoin clearing into a standard capability, the decline and risk-control friction issuers face when connecting to more countries and more merchant types should gradually ease. Our editorially selected MPCard Asia Elite runs precisely on Asia-Pacific virtual Visa rails — the deeper Visa’s stablecoin settlement footprint gets in Asia-Pacific, the more this type of card stands to benefit over time in terms of stability with local merchants and subscription billing. Latin American users may also want to keep an eye on issuers like RedotPay, which have moved early into emerging markets.
It’s worth staying realistic about the timeline:
- 7 days: Nothing changes. Your limits, fees, and KYC tier won’t be adjusted because of this news.
- 30 days: Users outside the 18 Latin American countries will feel essentially no impact; the specific Asia-Pacific rollout list has not yet been announced.
- 90 days: Watch for whether any issuers announce they’ve “integrated Bridge clearing” — that’s the signal that would directly concern you.
Historical comparison: how is this different from the 2024 “Visa connects directly to stablecoins” wave
This isn’t Visa’s first attempt at stablecoins. Back in 2021, it allowed USDC settlement on Ethereum, and in 2024 extended USDC settlement to Solana. But those rounds leaned heavily toward “institutional back-end plumbing” — ordinary cardholders barely noticed.
The biggest difference this time is the consumer-facing side: Bridge is tying stablecoin settlement directly to a consumer-facing card issuing program, and it’s launching first in markets like Latin America, where fiat volatility is high and demand for dollars is strong. In other words, previous rounds were “Visa reconciling internally using stablecoins,” while this round is “what gets debited behind the scenes when a cardholder swipes is stablecoin.”
One thing that hasn’t changed also deserves a mention: the underlying asset is still predominantly USDC. This connects to market memory of USDC’s brief de-peg in 2023 (dropping to as low as $0.87 during the SVB incident) — the convenience of stablecoin cards rests on the premise that the stablecoin itself doesn’t run into trouble. USDT holders using this kind of USDC-first clearing network will, in most cases, have automatic in-wallet conversion, with the exchange rate and spread governed by the issuer’s own page.
Compliance boundaries: what’s clearly allowed, what’s a gray area, and where you stand
The Visa × Bridge expansion runs through licensed issuers’ compliance channels in each country and does not itself change the legal status of stablecoin cards where you live. Three categories of boundaries need to be distinguished:
- Clearly allowed: The EU has clear rules for stablecoins (including USDC/USDT-type EMTs) under the MiCAR framework, and licensed issuers can operate freely. See the EU compliance guide.
- Gray area: Japan has a licensing regime for stablecoin issuance, but most overseas-issued virtual cards fall into a gray zone where the individual bears the risk — see the Japan compliance guide.
- Clearly prohibited / high risk: Mainland China maintains a prohibitive stance on crypto-related payments. The Mainland China compliance note spells this out clearly — this expansion does not change that.
Bottom line: Visa opening up its backend does not automatically mean your local regulator is giving a green light.
What to watch next
- The Asia-Pacific rollout list: Only the 18 Latin American countries have been announced so far; specific Asia-Pacific countries and timelines remain unclear — this is the piece of information Asia-Pacific users should wait for most.
- Issuer integration announcements: Watch whether the issuer you use announces it has “integrated Bridge / Visa stablecoin settlement” — that’s more directly relevant to you than Visa’s overall plan.
- The end-of-2026 milestone: How much of the 100-country target gets completed, and which markets it covers, is the hard metric for judging how substantial this news really is.
- The USDT vs USDC support ratio: Bridge currently leans heavily on USDC; whether it expands native USDT settlement later will directly affect conversion costs for USDT holders.
Editorial recommendations
- If you hold an MPCard or another Visa BIN USDT card: no action needed. This news is a long-term backend positive and won’t change your fees, limits, or available merchants in the short term.
- Latin American users planning to apply for a new card: keep an eye on whether local licensed issuers follow suit soon, but there’s no need to rush a decision because of this news — first get clear on the issuer’s fee page and availability in your country. For a side-by-side comparison, see the 2026 USDT Card Top 5.
- Newcomers trying to understand how U-cards actually work: we recommend reading What Is a U-Card first. Once you understand the “stablecoin → clearing → fiat” chain, news about partnerships like this becomes easy to interpret.
- What not to do: don’t treat “even Visa is getting involved” as a signal that your local regulator has given the green light. The backend is connected — front-end compliance still depends on where you stand.
We do not conduct independent on-chain testing; the analysis in this article is based on public information from Visa, Bridge, and various issuers. Please refer to each issuer’s official page for specific fees, limits, and country availability.