Western Union has partnered with Crossmint to launch USDPT, a U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoin on the Solana blockchain, with the token expected to go live in the Western Union has partnered with Crossmint to launch USDPT, a U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoin on the Solana blockchain, with the token expected to go live in the

Western Union Is Launching a Stablecoin on Solana

2026/03/05 17:58
4 min read
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Western Union has partnered with Crossmint to launch USDPT, a U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoin on the Solana blockchain, with the token expected to go live in the first half of 2026.

The stablecoin will be issued by Anchorage Digital Bank, a federally regulated institution, and will connect on-chain dollar transfers to Western Union’s physical cash network spanning more than 200 countries.

What the Infrastructure Actually Does

Crossmint is providing the technical foundation for the integration, including cryptocurrency wallets and payment APIs that plug USDPT into Western Union’s existing systems. Western Union is building what it calls a Digital Asset Network, a layer designed to bridge digital assets with physical cash infrastructure.

The practical outcome is this: a user or fintech application settles a transaction in USDPT on Solana, and the recipient can collect local currency at any of Western Union’s 360,000 cash pickup locations worldwide.

The blockchain leg of the transaction runs on Solana for speed and cost efficiency. The final mile runs on Western Union’s existing agent network, which took decades and billions of dollars to build.

That combination is genuinely difficult to replicate from scratch. Crypto-native remittance projects have tried to build the last-mile cash distribution piece for years and largely failed because physical agent networks do not scale quickly. Western Union already has the agent network. What it lacked was the on-chain settlement rail. This partnership fills that gap without either party having to build what the other already has.

Why Solana and Why Now

Solana’s selection makes sense against the backdrop of today’s data. The Grayscale report from earlier this week showed Solana processing $650 billion in adjusted stablecoin volume in February alone, making it the fastest-growing stablecoin settlement network by transaction volume. Instant finality and fees measured in fractions of a cent make it the practical choice for high-frequency, lower-value remittance transactions where cost per transfer matters.

Anchorage Digital Bank issuing the token adds a layer of regulatory credibility that earlier stablecoin remittance attempts lacked. Anchorage holds a federal bank charter from the OCC, the same regulatory body Morgan Stanley is currently petitioning for its own digital trust charter. A federally chartered bank issuing the stablecoin means USDPT enters the market with a compliance profile that most crypto-native stablecoins cannot match.

The Remittance Market This Is Targeting

Western Union’s core business is moving money across borders for people who need it to arrive as cash. Its customers are frequently migrant workers sending wages home to families in countries where bank accounts are uncommon and cash is the only accessible format. The World Bank estimates global remittance flows exceed $800 billion annually, with fees averaging around 6% per transaction through traditional channels.

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Stablecoin settlement on Solana costs fractions of a cent per transaction. The fee compression potential is enormous if the infrastructure works at scale. Whether Western Union passes those savings to customers in the form of lower fees or retains them as margin improvement is a business decision the announcement does not address.

The integration also opens a second channel: third-party fintech applications settling on Solana can plug directly into Western Union’s payout network without building their own cash distribution infrastructure. That makes Western Union a back-end settlement layer for other fintechs, a meaningfully different business model than running consumer-facing transfer counters.

What This Means for the Broader Stablecoin Picture

This announcement lands in the same week that Trump pressured banks on stablecoin legislation, Bridge launched USDsui on Sui with a novel yield model, and Solana’s February stablecoin volume hit record levels. The convergence is not coincidental. Regulatory clarity, even partial clarity, is pulling traditional institutions into stablecoin infrastructure faster than they moved during the 2021 cycle.

Western Union is 175 years old. It has survived telegraphs, wire transfers, and online banking by adapting its distribution network to each new payment technology. USDPT on Solana is that adaptation for the stablecoin era. Whether the launch timeline holds and whether adoption scales beyond early fintech partners are the open questions. The strategic direction is no longer ambiguous.

The post Western Union Is Launching a Stablecoin on Solana appeared first on ETHNews.

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