Mastercard has announced it is expanding support for compliant stablecoins across its payment and settlement processes, explicitly naming three regulated stablecoins—USDC, PYUSD, and RLUSD—with plans to start in the US and Latin America before rolling out globally. This move pushes stablecoins beyond being just “a balance in your wallet” and into the card network’s settlement layer—the layer where funds are settled between issuers and card networks. Notably, the announcement mentions USDC, PYUSD, and RLUSD, but not USDT.
For USDT Virtual Card Users: Top-Ups Stay the Same, But the Pipes Are Changing
Let’s start with the bottom line: the day-to-day usage of your USDT card won’t change because of this news. Whether it’s MPCard, an Asia-Pacific-routed virtual Visa, or Crypto.com Visa and Bybit Card, the user-facing flow remains the same: ₮ in your wallet → top up the card → spend. What Mastercard is changing here is the settlement pipeline between the network and the issuer, not the deposit channel between users and issuers.
But when the pipes change, the water eventually flows differently. Here are three time windows worth watching, depending on your situation:
- Within 7 days: Nothing changes. No issuer will adjust user fees or limits based on a single network-layer announcement.
- Within 30 days: Watch whether your issuer mentions “multi-stablecoin settlement” in announcements or changelogs. If your card network is Mastercard (note that MPCard’s Asia Elite variant runs on Visa rails and isn’t directly affected here), any future drop in settlement costs could eventually show up in card exchange rates or monthly fees—but that’s a business decision by the issuer, not something automatic.
- Within 90 days: The real question worth watching is “USDC/PYUSD/RLUSD are in the settlement layer—when does USDT get in?” For a market dominated by USDT cards, this is the central question.
If you’re currently shopping for a card, check our 2026 Top 5 USDT Cards and Lowest Fee Comparison—this news won’t change the rankings in either list in the short term, since it affects the back end rather than user-facing fees.
Historical Parallel: Same Path as Visa’s Stablecoin Settlement Pilot
This isn’t the first time a stablecoin has entered a card network’s settlement layer. Back in 2023, Visa expanded its USDC settlement pilot on Solana and Ethereum, letting acquirers settle cross-border payments with Visa using USDC. Mastercard’s move follows the same logic—treating stablecoins as an interbank settlement asset, not a consumer wallet balance.
What’s the same: both are aimed at settlement efficiency, especially in cross-border, cross-timezone scenarios where traditional bank settlement carries T+1/T+2 delays and costs. What’s different comes down to two things: first, this announcement explicitly includes PYUSD (PayPal) and RLUSD (Ripple), expanding the roster of issuers involved—suggesting the card network is betting on a “multi-stablecoin” future rather than a single asset; second, the timing comes after US stablecoin legislation has progressively taken shape, with the phrase “regulated” repeatedly emphasized—meaning regulatory status is the ticket to entry, which is precisely why USDT isn’t on the list for now.
Compared with the brief USDC de-pegging event in 2023, which exposed the concentration risk of relying on a single reserve bank, the card network’s choice of the USDC/PYUSD/RLUSD combination is essentially using “reserve transparency + regulatory licensing” to underwrite risk management for its settlement assets.
Regulatory Boundaries: “Regulated” Doesn’t Mean USDT Is Excluded
It’s worth clarifying the legal status here to avoid misreading the situation:
- Explicitly permitted: USDC, PYUSD, and RLUSD in Mastercard’s settlement layer—this is the scope the company has proactively announced.
- Gray area: USDT’s status at the card network settlement layer. It hasn’t been “banned”—it simply hasn’t been “included.” USDT remains the deposit asset for the vast majority of virtual cards, and it’s fully legal for users to use on their end.
- Key distinction: what stablecoin is used at the settlement layer and what stablecoin users deposit are two separate questions. Even if settlement runs entirely on USDC, you can still top up with ₮—the issuer handles the conversion internally.
Requirements on the cardholder side vary widely by jurisdiction. Asia-Pacific users in particular should pay attention to local regulatory attitudes toward stablecoin cards—see our Japan Compliance Guide and Hong Kong Compliance Guide. US users with heavy subscription spending should check our US Compliance Guide, since the US is the first market for this rollout.
Milestones Worth Watching Next
- Launch confirmation: Whether Mastercard names specific issuer partners and launch dates in the US/Latin America. An announcement is intent—a launch is what counts.
- Whether USDT joins the list: Over the next 1-2 quarters, watch whether Tether’s regulatory progress translates into access to the card network settlement layer—this would be a watershed moment for the USDT card market.
- Issuer changelogs: Whether Mastercard-network cards like Crypto.com Visa and Bybit Card mention multi-stablecoin settlement within 30-90 days, and whether it brings fee changes.
- RLUSD/PYUSD circulation: Settlement-layer integration is often accompanied by an increase in on-chain circulation for these two relatively younger stablecoins—an objective signal for distinguishing real usage from PR.
Follow further details via the original CoinPost article and the Mastercard official Newsroom; all fees and launch timing should be confirmed against official pages.
Editorial Take
- If you hold a USDT card like MPCard, Bybit Card, or Crypto.com Visa: No action needed. This news doesn’t change your top-up or spending flow today, and there’s no urgency to “act before a certain date.”
- If you’re currently choosing a card: Don’t let “Mastercard added stablecoin support” become your main selection criterion. For USDT users, what actually determines your experience remains the issuer’s deposit fees, card exchange rates, and limits—these are clearer in our Lowest Fee Comparison.
- If you’re tracking structural stablecoin changes: Focus on the single question of “when does USDT enter the settlement layer,” rather than which of USDC/PYUSD/RLUSD comes first. The former is what will actually determine the long-term cost curve for the USDT card ecosystem.
Bottom line: this is good news on the back end, but it doesn’t require you to do anything today.