Stablecoins are on a path from the crypto wallet to the cash register, with a new Deloitte Center for Financial Services report predicting that more than $200 billion in U.S. retail purchases will be stablecoin-enabled by 2030 — representing an estimated 2.5% of all domestic noncash transactions processed through stablecoin-based settlement, funding, or backend infrastructure.
The report, 2026 Financial Services Industry Predictions, identifies three interlocking forces driving that shift. The first is the expansion of stablecoin-linked debit and credit cards by major networks including Visa and Mastercard, which allow consumers to spend stablecoin balances with a familiar card swipe while merchants receive settlement in U.S. dollars — potentially reducing processing fees that currently exceed 2% per transaction for many small and mid-sized businesses.
“Stablecoin-backed cards are likely to be one of the first big wins because they work with systems already in place,” Tim Davis, Principal at Deloitte & Touche LLP, told Connect Money. “Instead of asking everyone to learn a new way to pay, they plug stablecoins into the card networks and wallets people already use. But familiarity alone isn’t enough. Consumers need a reason to actually use them: faster payments, cheaper cross-border transactions, or some other real benefit.”
Merchant economics will be equally decisive. “Merchants also care about the same thing: does this actually make economic sense? They will likely only adopt if stablecoin-backed cards also mean lower fees and faster settlement,” Davis added.
The second catalyst is the rise of agentic commerce. As AI agents increasingly execute purchases autonomously on behalf of consumers — Morgan Stanley estimates nearly half of e-commerce shoppers will use AI agents for personal spending decisions by 2030 — stablecoins’ programmability and 24/7 settlement rails make them a natural fit for frictionless, always-on transactions that traditional payment systems are not designed to support.
The third driver is merchant-led loyalty programs. Large retailers may launch branded stablecoins tied to cashback rewards and exclusive incentives, while smaller merchants are more likely to adopt white-labeled or general-purpose stablecoins through third-party processors. The passage of the GENIUS Act, which legitimized stablecoins as regulated financial instruments, has accelerated retailer evaluation of these models as a tool for margin relief, the report noted.
Davis identified cross-border commerce as the most fertile ground for early adoption. “Cross-border payments stand out as an area of early traction. Stablecoins can skip a lot of the banking middlemen and cut foreign exchange costs, especially for global e-commerce and travel,” he said. “The reason cards matter is they’re a bridge. The technology underneath can evolve while the experience on top stays familiar. That’s the path to actually getting scale — as long as the economics and regulations work out.”
Among merchant categories, Davis pointed to global marketplaces, crypto-native retailers, high-volume low-margin businesses, and travel and hospitality as the strongest early candidates — though he cautioned that the benefits in travel depend heavily on whether stablecoin payments move off card rails entirely or simply layer onto existing networks. “If stablecoins just run through card networks like everything else, the fraud and dispute problems don’t really change,” he noted.
Deloitte frames the broader infrastructure shift as a convergence play — banks building stablecoin custody and tokenized deposit capabilities, card networks bridging traditional and blockchain rails, payment service providers simplifying merchant integration, and digital wallet providers embedding stablecoins into tap-to-pay experiences. The firm suggests a potential tipping point for broader adoption could arrive within the next two years.
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