- Stablecoin-linked cards expanding to 100+ countries
- Users can spend from MetaMask and Phantom at 175M merchants
- GENIUS Act clears regulatory path for scaled adoption
When Visa and Stripe-owned Bridge first launched their stablecoin card program in 2025, it felt contained. A rollout across parts of Central and South America. Eighteen countries. Measured expansion. It looked like a pilot.

That framing is gone now. Expanding to more than 100 countries transforms stablecoin payments from a regional test into global infrastructure. Stablecoins are no longer confined to DeFi protocols or trading desks. They are plugging directly into the largest card network on earth, and that shift is structural.
Spend Directly From Your Crypto Wallet
The mechanics are deceptively simple. A user holds stablecoins in a wallet like MetaMask or Phantom. They tap a Visa-linked card at checkout. Behind the scenes, the stablecoin balance settles the transaction.
No traditional bank deposit is required. No manual fiat conversion. Because the transaction rides Visa’s network, it is accepted at roughly 175 million merchant locations worldwide. Crypto has always had settlement rails. What it lacked was universal distribution, and this closes that gap fast.
Regulation Set the Stage
The rollout comes after the passage of the U.S. GENIUS Act, which formalized reserve, audit, and compliance requirements for stablecoin issuers. That clarity altered the tone of the debate. Stablecoin payments are no longer framed primarily as regulatory gray areas.

Bridge also received conditional national bank charter approval from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. Combined with Visa’s existing regulatory footprint, this looks less like experimentation and more like convergence between traditional finance and onchain infrastructure.
The Quiet Normalization of Crypto Payments
This expansion signals something subtle but important. Stablecoins are shifting from speculative instruments toward everyday financial tools. Not yield farming. Not hype cycles. Payments.
When Visa and Stripe integrate onchain settlement into global commerce, the conversation changes. The question is no longer whether stablecoins can work at scale. It becomes how quickly they scale, and how much traditional payment volume migrates onto blockchain rails in the process.











