Author: Charitarth Sindhu, Fractional Business & AI Workflow Consultant
Stablecoin B2B payments are reshaping how businesses move money across borders. Adoption of stablecoin B2B payments surged 733% year-over-year to roughly $226 billion in 2025. That volume makes up about 60% of all real stablecoin payment flows. Meanwhile, traditional cross-border wires still take days to settle, charge hidden fees, and shut down on weekends.
So where do stablecoin B2B payments deliver the biggest advantage? Seven business leaders share concrete use cases from their own operations. Their experiences cover supplier payments, freelancer payroll, steel distribution, and solar equipment sourcing.
Stablecoin B2B Payments Solve the Correspondent Banking Bottleneck
The most common pain point is the correspondent banking chain. When a business sends money internationally, that payment often passes through two or three intermediary banks. Each one adds processing time, compliance checks, and fees. Only 12% of payments to China settle within two hours, making it one of the slowest corridors globally.
For businesses where inventory release depends on confirmed receipt of funds, those delays create real operational damage. Stablecoin B2B payments bypass intermediaries entirely. Settlement happens on-chain in seconds rather than days.
David Grossman runs Lessn, a payments orchestration platform that has processed over $100 million in transaction volume. He explains why stablecoin B2B payments matter for Australian businesses:
“One practical use case where stablecoins outperform traditional rails for cross-border B2B payments is time-sensitive supplier payments between countries with slower banking systems or multiple intermediary banks. For example, an Australian business paying a contractor or supplier in Southeast Asia or Latin America can face delays of several business days due to correspondent banking chains, cut-off times, and compliance checks. Stablecoins enable near-instant settlement, 24/7, without relying on SWIFT or local banking hours. This is particularly valuable when inventory release, freight movement, or service delivery depends on confirmed receipt of funds, as faster settlement can directly reduce operational bottlenecks and improve supplier relationships.”
- David Grossman, Founder & Chief Growth Officer, Lessn
Brady Souden sources solar panels and battery systems from international manufacturers. His experience shows why faster settlement appeals to trade-dependent businesses:
“When you run a solar installation business, your timeline is locked to the customer. They have taken time off work, the scaffolding is booked, and the electricians are scheduled. If the equipment shipment stalls because a supplier payment is sitting in banking limbo for four days, the whole job falls apart.
We source inverters and battery systems from overseas manufacturers. The payment confirmation gap is where the real damage happens. Your supplier will not release the shipment until they see cleared funds, and your bank cannot tell you exactly when that will be. So you either pay days early and tie up working capital, or you risk delays that cost you the install window.
Faster settlement would tighten that loop significantly. Whether that comes from stablecoins or better fintech rails matters less than the outcome. What I need is confirmed receipt in hours, not days. The technology that delivers that reliably and legally wins.”
- Brady Souden, Director, Econ Energy
Stablecoin B2B Payments Expose Hidden FX Margins
Beyond speed, stablecoin B2B payments offer a transparency advantage that traditional rails lack. Australian banks typically mark up exchange rates by 2-5% above mid-market without disclosing it as a separate fee. Intermediary banks add lifting fees on top. By the time funds arrive, the recipient receives far less than the sender expected.
Grossman elaborates on this hidden cost problem:
“Stablecoins can also provide cost and transparency advantages in corridors where foreign exchange spreads and intermediary bank fees are high or unpredictable. Traditional cross-border payments often involve hidden FX margins and lifting fees that make final settlement amounts uncertain. With stablecoins, funds move on-chain with visible transaction costs and without multiple banking intermediaries, which can reduce friction and simplify reconciliation. For businesses operating on tight margins or managing frequent international supplier payments, this combination of speed, predictability, and lower friction can offer a meaningful operational advantage over legacy rails.”
- David Grossman, Founder & Chief Growth Officer, Lessn
Callum Gracie runs a global remote team for his Canberra SEO agency. He sees these hidden costs every month:
“Running a remote agency means I pay team members across multiple time zones every month. Australian banks are not built for that. A standard international transfer from my business account takes 2-3 business days and costs $20-30 in fees before you even look at the exchange rate markup. Most banks hide 2-3% in the FX spread without telling you.
I started exploring stablecoin B2B payments for contractors in Southeast Asia where the banking delays hit hardest. The speed difference is night and day. But the real win for a small agency is predictability. When I send $3,000 to a contractor, I want them to receive close to $3,000. With traditional wires, they might get $2,850 after everyone takes their cut, and neither of us knows the final number until it lands.
Stablecoins are not a magic fix though. The tax treatment in Australia means every transaction needs documentation. For a business doing 15-20 international payments a month, that adds bookkeeping overhead. You need to weigh the savings against the admin cost and decide corridor by corridor.”
- Callum Gracie, Founder, Gia AI
Stablecoin B2B Payments Settle in Seconds, Not Days
The speed difference becomes dramatic at higher volumes. Dhari Alabdulhadi sends $50,000 weekly to suppliers. He switched from traditional Peruvian bank wires to stablecoin B2B payments using USDC on the Solana blockchain. Solana transactions cost approximately $0.0003-$0.006 and achieve full finality in under 15 seconds.
“I used stablecoins to fix my global supply chain between Peru and China. I run a business in Peru that needs to send $50,000 to a supplier in China every week. Using traditional Peruvian banks and international wires was a nightmare. The transfers often took 3 to 5 business days to clear. We were losing up to 6% on every deal between the sending fee, the intermediary bank cuts, and the exchange rate spread. In Peru, our production lines would stall because the ‘funds in transit’ were stuck in the banking system. It means our Chinese partners wouldn’t release the cargo until they saw the cash.
I stopped using the slow, old-school wire systems and switched to sending USDC (a digital dollar) over the Solana blockchain. The payments now settle in 90 seconds instead of an entire week. The transaction cost dropped from hundreds of dollars to less than $0.01. I don’t have to worry about Peruvian bank holidays or Chinese time zones. I can send the payment on a Sunday afternoon.”
- Dhari Alabdulhadi, CTO and Founder, Ubuy Peru
However, the China corridor warrants scrutiny. China comprehensively banned all cryptocurrency transactions. In November 2025, the PBOC convened 13 government agencies to reaffirm the ban, explicitly targeting stablecoins. While stablecoin B2B payments work well in many emerging market corridors, businesses should verify the legal status of crypto in both jurisdictions before committing.
Stablecoin B2B Payments Improve Working Capital Cycles
When payments settle faster, businesses can tighten their cash conversion cycles. That frees up working capital and strengthens vendor relationships. Abhinav Gupta, founder of a US-based accounting firm, highlights the trust dividend that stablecoin B2B payments create for his clients:
“One place where stablecoins genuinely win is paying overseas vendors when timing matters.
If you’ve ever sent a cross-border wire, you know the drill. You hit send, the money disappears for a few days, fees show up from places you didn’t authorize, and everyone keeps asking the same question. Has the payment landed yet?
With stablecoins, that uncertainty goes away. A US company paying a vendor in India or LATAM can settle in minutes, not days. Both sides see the transaction happen. No intermediaries, no guessing, no email chains chasing banks.
The real advantage shows up in working capital. When payments move faster, you don’t need to build artificial buffers into contracts. Vendors get paid closer to delivery. They trust you more and often price better because cash certainty has value.
This isn’t about crypto hype or replacing banks everywhere. It’s about solving a very old finance problem with a better rail. When speed, visibility, and control matter, stablecoins simply do the job better.”
- Abhinav Gupta, Founder, Profitjets
Hasan Can Soygök pays freelancers in over 40 countries through his fintech platform. He sees both the promise and the limitations at scale:
“We pay freelancers in over 40 countries every month. The traditional banking system treats each corridor like a separate problem. One payment to the Philippines takes two days. Another to Nigeria takes five. Fees range from 1% to 6% depending on the corridor, and we never know the exact landed amount until the freelancer confirms receipt.
Stablecoins solve the consistency problem. The transfer works the same way whether you are sending to Manila or Lagos. Settlement happens in seconds, costs stay predictable, and the freelancer sees the funds without chasing their bank for updates.
The catch most people gloss over is the off-ramp. Getting USDC into a freelancer’s local bank account still depends on local exchange infrastructure. In some markets that conversion adds 1-2% back onto the cost and can take hours. So the on-chain transfer is fast and cheap, but the last mile varies wildly by country. We have found stablecoin B2B payments work best in corridors where banking infrastructure is weakest but crypto regulation is permissive. For everything else, fintech rails like Wise still compete on total cost.”
- Hasan Can Soygök, Founder, Remotify
Where Stablecoin B2B Payments Still Fall Short
The GENIUS Act, signed into US law in July 2025, established the first comprehensive federal stablecoin framework. The EU’s MiCA regulations and Hong Kong’s Stablecoin Ordinance are now operational too. These milestones help. Yet stablecoin B2B payments still carry risks that traditional banking handles natively.
Every stablecoin transaction creates a taxable event under IRS rules. Blockchain payments are irreversible with no chargeback protection. On top of that, the off-ramp problem persists. Converting stablecoins back to local fiat still costs 0.5-2% in most corridors. That narrows the stablecoin B2B payments cost advantage over fintech alternatives like Wise Business or Payoneer.
Darren Tredgold manages international steel procurement from Australia. He sees both the opportunity and the limits firsthand:
“In steel distribution, your supplier relationships determine your pricing. When we pay international mills and stockholders, the speed of that payment directly affects how they treat us on the next order. A smaller distributor that pays fast and predictably will get better allocation than a bigger competitor whose payments take a week to clear.
The correspondent banking chain between Australia and Asian steel suppliers is slow and expensive. We budget for 3-5 business days on every international transfer and build that buffer into our inventory planning. That means carrying more stock than we should, which ties up cash that could go toward serving customers in Queanbeyan, Nowra, or Moss Vale.
I am watching stablecoin payment infrastructure closely, but the China corridor is the elephant in the room. Most of our international steel supply touches China at some point, and their government has banned cryptocurrency transactions outright. Until that changes, or until reliable workarounds exist through Hong Kong, stablecoins remain a partial solution for our business. The Southeast Asian corridors look more promising.”
- Darren Tredgold, General Manager, Independent Steel Company
The bottom line? Stablecoin B2B payments deliver genuine advantages in speed, cost, and transparency for specific corridors. The strongest case for stablecoin B2B payments is jurisdictions with poor banking infrastructure but crypto-friendly regulation. Parts of Latin America and Southeast Asia fit that profile well. For corridors involving China or India, regulatory barriers still limit adoption. Businesses considering the switch should evaluate corridor by corridor.
