Aon completed a proof-of-concept to settle insurance premiums using stablecoins, according to a Monday release. The company worked with Coinbase and Paxos to process payments on public blockchains. The test used USDC on Ethereum and PYUSD on Solana for controlled premium transactions.
Aon said it carried out the trial as one of the world’s largest insurance brokers. The London-based firm advises on about $5 trillion in assets. It processed premium payments using Circle Internet’s USDC token on Ethereum. The company confirmed it completed the transactions in a controlled environment. It described the work as a proof-of-concept exercise.
The broker partnered with Coinbase and Paxos to execute the payments. Coinbase supported the crypto exchange functions for the transactions. Paxos provided blockchain infrastructure services for the settlement process. Aon said the initiative marked the first known case of a major global broker accepting stablecoins for premiums. However, the company limited the activity to a demonstration setting.
Aon also used PYUSD for part of the trial on the Solana network. The company processed dollar-pegged tokens to settle selected premium obligations. It said blockchain rails enabled faster movement of funds than traditional bank transfers. The firm added that public ledgers recorded each transaction transparently. The company maintained oversight throughout the controlled test.
Premium payments in insurance often move through banks and clearing systems. These systems can take days to settle, especially across borders. Aon said blockchain-based payments can move funds within minutes. The company stated that the trial helped it observe settlement speed and record-keeping. It confirmed that the transactions complied with internal frameworks.
The announcement came as stablecoins reached a market value of about $300 billion. In 2025, the United States passed the Genius Act to regulate stablecoin issuers. The law established federal rules covering reserves and oversight requirements. Aon referenced the evolving regulatory framework in its statement. The company said clearer rules encouraged corporate experiments with tokenized dollars.
John King, head of corporate portfolio strategy and treasurer for Aon, addressed the initiative. He said, “While broader adoption of stablecoins across corporate payments is still emerging, the long-term potential is large.” He added that the work helps the company understand operational mechanics. He stated that the company aims to evaluate efficiency and cost savings over time.
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