Payments giant Mastercard is expanding its blockchain strategy by bringing together major crypto and fintech firms—including Binance, PayPal and Ripple—in a new program aimed at integrating digital assets with the traditional payments ecosystem.
The initiative, described as a Crypto Partner Program, gathers more than 85 companies across the crypto and financial sectors to collaborate on blockchain-based payment solutions that could connect on-chain transactions with banks, merchants and global commerce.
Mastercard said the program is designed to explore how digital assets and blockchain infrastructure can work with the company’s existing payment rails, which already connect financial institutions and merchants in more than 200 countries and territories.
The partner list includes crypto exchanges, fintech platforms, stablecoin issuers and blockchain developers. Among the most prominent participants are Binance, Ripple, PayPal, Circle, Gemini and Paxos.
By joining the program, these companies will work with Mastercard to test new products and infrastructure that could enable blockchain-based payments across everyday commercial networks.
Potential use cases include cross-border transfers, business-to-business payments, global payouts and settlement systems that combine digital assets with existing financial rails.
The initiative reflects Mastercard’s belief that the next phase of digital payments will emerge through collaboration between traditional financial networks and crypto-native companies.
Each of the major partners brings different capabilities to the effort.
Binance contributes liquidity and digital asset trading infrastructure, while PayPal provides access to a large global user base and consumer payment tools. Ripple, which focuses on blockchain-based cross-border payments, can support settlement infrastructure designed to move value between countries more efficiently.
Together with Mastercard’s global merchant and banking network, the combination could allow users to pay with digital assets while merchants receive funds in local currency through familiar payment channels.
Industry observers say the collaboration highlights a growing trend: blockchain technology is increasingly being integrated into existing financial systems rather than replacing them outright.
Mastercard has been exploring blockchain and digital assets for several years, including pilot programs for crypto-linked cards and compliance tools such as Crypto Credential.
The new partner program brings many of those efforts together into a broader ecosystem focused on real-world payment applications.
The move also comes as other large financial institutions expand blockchain payment initiatives. Rival card networks and major banks have been testing stablecoin settlements, tokenized deposits and blockchain-based payment rails, signaling rising interest in digital assets across the global financial industry.
By assembling a wide network of partners across the crypto economy, Mastercard’s latest effort suggests that blockchain payments are shifting from experimental pilots toward larger-scale deployment within mainstream commerce.
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