- Polymarket is migrating from bridged USDC on Polygon to native USDC
- Circle says the shift improves efficiency, scalability, and institutional readiness
- The move strengthens stablecoin settlement standards for onchain markets
Circle, the issuer of the USDC stablecoin, announced a new partnership with Polymarket focused on building a more reliable, dollar-based settlement layer on the prediction market platform. The collaboration is designed to strengthen how funds move through Polymarket, especially as volumes grow and more regulated users enter the ecosystem.

Executives from both companies framed the partnership as a blend of Circle’s financial infrastructure and Polymarket’s market model. The message is fairly clear. Polymarket wants to look less like an experimental crypto product and more like a serious onchain venue with consistent settlement standards.
Polymarket Moves Away From Bridged USDC
A key part of the deal is Polymarket’s migration from bridged USDC on Polygon to native USDC. That might sound like a technical detail, but it’s a meaningful one. Bridged assets introduce extra layers of risk, complexity, and friction, especially for institutional participants who care about redemption, compliance, and settlement clarity.
By switching to native USDC, Polymarket is aiming for better capital efficiency, stronger scalability, and cleaner compatibility with institutional workflows. It’s basically a step toward making the platform feel more “real” from a finance perspective, not just crypto-native.

Why Native USDC Matters for Onchain Markets
Native USDC is fully backed and redeemable for US dollars, which is the entire point of using it as a settlement asset. In fast-moving prediction markets, consistency matters. Users need to trust that the unit they’re trading in isn’t exposed to bridge risk or settlement ambiguity.
This transition also reinforces a broader trend in crypto markets. Stablecoins are becoming the default rails for onchain finance, not just for trading, but for settlement, collateral, and payments. Polymarket choosing native USDC is a signal that stablecoin infrastructure is moving from “useful” to essential.
Polymarket’s US Expansion Makes This More Timely
The timing isn’t random. After receiving regulatory approval from the CFTC, Polymarket launched its US app in December 2025, giving American users access to its crypto-based prediction markets. That expansion naturally raises expectations around compliance, reliability, and user protections.
As Polymarket grows in the US market, the settlement layer has to be clean enough to support scale. Partnering with Circle and moving to native USDC helps tighten that foundation. It won’t solve every challenge, but it removes one of the more avoidable risks.











