Cross-border remittance giant MoneyGram has officially issued MGUSD—a dollar-pegged stablecoin running on the Stellar network. According to a report from the Spanish-language crypto outlet CriptoNoticias, MoneyGram says MGUSD will serve as the underlying asset for a range of its financial services. This isn’t MoneyGram’s first collaboration with Stellar—the two have long partnered on “cash ⇄ USDC” on/off-ramp channels (with USDC, issued by Circle, as the settlement asset behind the scenes). What’s different this time is that MoneyGram has moved from “handling on/off-ramps for someone else’s stablecoin” to “issuing its own stablecoin.”
A note on sourcing: the facts in this article are based on this secondary report from CriptoNoticias. As of publication, we could not find a corresponding primary press release on MoneyGram’s investor relations page or the Stellar Foundation’s official site. For specifics on MGUSD’s reserve structure, issuance scale, and redemption mechanism, please rely on MoneyGram’s official future disclosures—we will not speculate on these details here.
Practical impact on USDT card users: essentially none (and that’s fine)
Let’s lead with the most important point: MGUSD is a new stablecoin on Stellar, and it currently has zero overlap with the USDT card in your wallet.
The reason is simple—the top-up rails for mainstream USDT virtual cards overwhelmingly only recognize USDT (and, in some cases, USDC), concentrated on chains like TRON (TRC20), Ethereum (ERC20), Solana, and BSC. MGUSD is neither USDT nor on any of these chains—it runs on Stellar (the XLM ecosystem).
Looking at specific cards:
- The editorially-selected MPCard review (Asia Elite variant) tops up via USDT, and Stellar is not currently among its officially supported chains;
- Bybit Card review balances come from a Bybit exchange account—you’d need to already hold the asset on Bybit, and there’s no announcement yet on whether Bybit spot markets will list an MGUSD trading pair;
- OKX Card review and RedotPay review are the same—MGUSD isn’t on their list of supported funding assets.
So the answer to “what should cardholders expect” from this news is: nothing changes in the short term. You don’t need to research Stellar wallets, switch chains, or worry about your existing USDT balance. What’s actually worth watching isn’t the coin itself, but whether any issuer announces integration—that’s the key switch that turns “a new stablecoin” into “a balance you can actually spend.”
Side by side: where MGUSD sits in the stablecoin supply landscape
Rather than debating whether MGUSD is good, it’s more useful to compare it with the stablecoin options you can already spend, on the dimensions that actually matter to card users:
| Dimension | USDT (TRC20) | USDC (major chains) | MGUSD (Stellar) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Card top-up support | Nearly all USDT cards | Some USDT cards | No mainstream card support yet |
| Common settlement chain | TRON | ETH / Solana / Base | Stellar |
| On-chain transfer cost | Very low (TRON) | Depends on chain | Very low (Stellar is known for low fees) |
| Issuer background | Tether | Circle | MoneyGram (physical remittance network) |
| Current relevance to cardholders | Primary top-up asset | Secondary top-up asset | No direct use yet |
The point of this table isn’t to declare a winner—it’s that MGUSD isn’t weak at the technical layer (Stellar is fast and low-fee); what it lacks is distribution channels—whether any card, exchange, or wallet plugs it into everyday payments. Stellar’s low-fee, low-latency design is naturally suited to remittances, but for the specific act of “swiping a card to pay for a subscription,” no issuer integration means even the fastest chain is useless.
Historical parallel: issuing a coin ≠ being able to spend it
Placing MGUSD on a timeline makes this clearer:
- USDC on Stellar, 2021–2023: MoneyGram already ran cash on/off-ramp channels with Stellar using USDC. That channel served “converting cash into digital dollars for underserved remittance markets”—a completely different user base from “spending a virtual card on subscriptions.” MGUSD will likely continue serving that same remittance base rather than targeting card payments.
- PayPal’s PYUSD launch, 2023: A company with a massive existing user base issued a stablecoin, and the market briefly expected rapid penetration into payment scenarios. What actually happened was that issuing a coin is one thing, and getting it genuinely circulating across cards, merchants, and exchanges is another—the pace was much slower than expected. We won’t cite specific adoption figures here, since sources vary and are hard to verify; but the pattern that “issuing is easy, building distribution is hard” clearly holds.
What MGUSD shares with both of these: a company with real-world business backing is issuing a stablecoin, and there’s no technical problem. What’s different: MoneyGram’s core use case is offline remittance networks, not online subscription payments—meaning the first place MGUSD gets real usage is more likely to be remittance payouts on certain corridors, not your ChatGPT Plus bill.
Regulatory and compliance angle: another dollar stablecoin that must land jurisdiction by jurisdiction
MGUSD is yet another dollar-pegged stablecoin, and where it can be legally issued, exchanged, or used for payments depends on each jurisdiction’s stablecoin framework—not on MoneyGram’s announcement alone.
- In the EU, MiCAR sets clear issuer licensing and reserve requirements for “e-money tokens (EMTs).” Any dollar stablecoin seeking compliant circulation among EU users has to clear this bar—which is exactly why issuing a coin and getting it onto European cards are two separate matters. See our EU compliance guide for the relevant boundaries.
- In the US, stablecoin legislation is still advancing, with issuer reserve audits and redemption guarantees as the core issues under discussion. See our US compliance guide for details.
For cardholders, the takeaway is: MGUSD currently sits in a state of “issued but not yet plugged into any mainstream card payment rail”—not banned, but not broadly usable for card spending either. It’s simply “not yet integrated.”
Milestones worth watching next
- An official primary press release from MoneyGram / Stellar: confirming MGUSD’s reserve structure and auditor, and its redemption terms—this determines whether it can be adopted through compliant channels.
- First exchange spot listing: watch whether Bybit, OKX, or others list an MGUSD spot pair. Only once listed could it flow into corresponding card balances.
- First issuer integration announcement: this is the real signal that turns MGUSD into “spendable balance.” Until then, it’s just news to cardholders.
- On-chain MGUSD circulation on Stellar: observable via Stellar block explorers, showing issuance and holder distribution as an objective adoption gauge.
Editorial recommendations
- If you already hold any USDT virtual card: no action needed. Your USDT balance, top-up rails, and spending ability are unaffected by this news.
- If you’re currently choosing a card: don’t adjust your decision because of MGUSD. Card selection should still be based on supported top-up currencies, fees, and available regions—see our Top 5 USDT Cards Worth Getting in 2026 and Lowest-Fee USDT Card Roundup.
- If you follow stablecoin infrastructure: just add MGUSD to your watchlist, and focus on “whether any exchange or issuer integrates it,” not the coin’s price—since it’s a dollar-pegged stablecoin, there’s not much to watch on the price front anyway.
Once a card issuer that genuinely supports MGUSD top-ups appears, we’ll update the corresponding card review and this article. Until then, the correct read on this news is: the stablecoin supply side has gained one more candidate, while the distribution side remains unchanged for now.