
In March, when Meta announced plans to begin paying creators in USDC across Colombia and the Philippines, with expansion to more than 160 countries expected by the end of the year, the move was widely interpreted as another milestone for stablecoins entering the financial mainstream. A company responsible for nearly $3 billion in annual creator payouts choosing onchain settlement over traditional banking rails is unquestionably significant. What Meta introduced, however, was not a complete payments experience. It was a faster way to move money between accounts.
For many users, particularly in emerging markets, the difficult part begins only after the payment arrives. Stablecoins have largely solved cross-border digital settlement, but integration into local consumer financial systems remains uneven. That is precisely where the next phase of payments competition will be decided.
The real friction starts after settlement
Creators receiving USDC payouts from Meta must connect external wallets, choose a supported network such as Solana or Polygon and manage their own custody. Meta warns that funds sent to the wrong address or an unsupported chain cannot be recovered. From that point onward, the platform steps out of the transaction entirely.
The transfer itself is efficient. Settlement is near-instant, costs are negligible and cross-border movement is effectively frictionless compared to traditional banking rails. But a creator in Manila or Bogotá will often still need to convert USDC into local currency to participate fully in the local consumer economy. That means sending funds to an exchange or liquidity provider, passing compliance checks, selling into fiat and withdrawing through domestic banking infrastructure. Each step introduces fees, delays and operational friction that sit entirely outside Meta’s ecosystem. For a creator whose expertise is content, not crypto, that is a significant amount of complexity to navigate just to access their own earnings.
And this is where stablecoin payments reveal their structural limitations. The infrastructure optimizes settlement, while usability still varies significantly by market.
The choice of the Philippines and Colombia as pilot markets makes this tension even more apparent. Both countries combine strong creator economies with costly cross-border payment systems, where conversion and transfer fees can consume a meaningful share of smaller payouts. In the Philippines in particular, mobile wallet adoption is already deeply embedded in everyday commerce, supported by platforms such as GCash and Maya and reinforced by the arrival of tokenized payment services from global technology companies. These are precisely the kinds of markets where stablecoin payouts should have a compelling advantage. Yet the off-ramp infrastructure remains fragmented, with uneven liquidity, compliance requirements, fees and user experience across providers and jurisdictions.
Card rails are starting from the other end
Card networks have taken a different approach. Instead of starting with blockchain settlement and leaving conversion to the user, they have focused on embedding stablecoins into existing financial infrastructure.
Mastercard’s $1.8 billion acquisition of BVNK expands its stablecoin settlement capabilities across more than 130 jurisdictions, integrated into established reporting and compliance systems. Visa’s partnership with Bridge enables stablecoin-linked cards that allow users to spend digital dollar balances at any merchant that accepts Visa, with conversion handled in the background.
The distinction reflects a deeper architectural choice about where complexity should sit. In Meta’s model, a payout requires a multi-step journey through wallets, exchanges and withdrawal queues before it becomes spendable. While this lighter-touch approach may also reflect the regulatory and operational burden of directly offering fiat conversion and custody services across dozens of jurisdictions, the user is ultimately responsible for navigating the crypto layer. In the card network model, stablecoins exist entirely behind the scenes. Users never see USDC balances or manage blockchain networks. Fiat enters and exits the system as normal, while stablecoins handle settlement invisibly.
Both models use stablecoins in the settlement layer, but they differ significantly in how user-facing complexity is handled.
Where stablecoin adoption actually scales
Stablecoin transaction volumes reached $33 trillion in 2025up 72 percent on the previous year, with institutional adoption continuing to accelerate. At this point, the question for the payments industry is no longer whether stablecoins will become part of global financial infrastructure – that shift is effectively underway – but whether the off-ramp layer can scale at the same pace as onchain settlement.
The systems that will ultimately scale are those that make blockchain infrastructure invisible to the end user. Stablecoins may sit in the middle of the stack, but the user experience will be defined entirely in fiat terms: pesos in a wallet, a card balance, or a payment accepted at checkout, with no awareness of the underlying rails.
This is where current implementations, including Meta’s, expose the industry’s remaining friction. By surfacing wallets, networks, and conversion steps directly to creators, they reveal the operational complexity that still sits beneath what is marketed as instant global payments. The infrastructure is efficient at settlement but fragmented at integration, reflecting an industry that has progressed faster in building onchain systems than at embedding them cleanly into existing financial workflows.
Meta has helped push the conversation forward, but the next phase of adoption will be defined less by transaction speed or blockchain throughput and more by seamless integration into the financial stack: card networks, banking apps and merchant terminals. In that end state, stablecoins will be present in the system but largely invisible to users. That work is already underway across the card networks; the platforms handling payouts will need to keep pace.
