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Stablecoins moved $35 trillion last year but only 1% of it was for 'real world' payments

While stablecoins settled around $35 trillion last year, only around 1% of that represented genuine payments like remittances and payroll, a new report found.

Updated Jan 23, 2026, 9:53 p.m. Published Jan 23, 2026, 9:50 p.m.
A Visa card being held to next to a payment terminal. (CardMapr.nl/Unsplash)

What to know:

  • Stablecoins processed more than $35 trillion in transactions last year, but only about 1% of that reflected real-world payments, a report by McKinsey and Artemis Analytics found.
  • The study estimated that roughly $390 billion in genuine stablecoin payments, such as vendor payments, payrolls, remittances and capital markets settlements.
  • Despite rapid growth and increasing interest from traditional payment firms like Visa and Stripe, true stablecoin payments still account for just a tiny fraction of the more than $2 quadrillion global payments market, the report said.

Stablecoins moved more than $35 trillion on blockchain rails last year, but only about 1% of that was for real-world payments, according to a new report by the consultancy firm McKinsey and the blockchain data firm Artemis Analytics.

Their analysis estimated that only $380 billion of activity reflected actual payments, such as paying suppliers, sending remittances or funding payroll.

That represents only a tiny fraction, some 0.02% of the overall global payments volume, which McKinsey put at more than $2 quadrillion annually.

The finding comes at a time when competition to dominate stablecoin-based payments is intensifying. Traditional payment giants like Visa and Stripe are pushing into stablecoin rails, while crypto firms like Circle and Tether pitch their tokens as replacements for slow and costly international money transfers.

While stablecoins are a fast-growing area with much potential, the report said, the headlines claiming stablecoin transaction volumes are overtaking Visa’s or Mastercard's multi-trillion payment flows miss a key point. The bulk of the stablecoin volume represents crypto trading, internal transfers or protocol-level functions that don’t touch end users, the authors said.

Long-term potential

So, where exactly are stablecions being used?

The report highlighted three areas where stablecoins are being used as a payment vehicle: business-to-business (B2B) transactions with $226 billion in annual volume; global payroll and remittances totaling $90 billion; and capital markets activity, such as automated fund settlements, totaling $8 billion last year.

"To be clear, the fact that true stablecoin payments are much lower than routine estimates doesn’t diminish stablecoins’ long-term potential as a payment rail," McKinsey and Artemis analysts wrote.

"Instead, it establishes a clearer baseline for assessing where the market stands and what will be required for stablecoins to scale."

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