Stablecoin payments share is under 1% of real-world payments
according to McKinsey & Company, annual real payment volumes using stablecoins are about US$390 billion, roughly 0.02% of global payments flows. That level places stablecoin settlement far below 1% of real-world payment activity.
The gap reflects a measurement reality: most recorded stablecoin transfers are not purchases or invoice settlements. They are on-chain movements that inflate raw volumes without corresponding commerce.
On-chain transactions vs real payments: trading drives most volume
According to TD Economics, crypto trading dominates stablecoin use, with about US$23 trillion in trading activity versus roughly US$4 trillion in payments, leaving payments near 6% of total activity. Cross-border flows via stablecoins remain negligible compared with overall cross-border volumes.
Hilary J. Allen, a law professor, cites analysts indicating that about 88% of 2024 stablecoin transaction value related to crypto trading, with only about 6% tied to payments. She also notes that just 1.9% of Americans used any crypto for payments in 2024.
Analysts use “on-chain, watered‑down” to describe high-frequency exchange transfers and protocol operations that pad volumes without generating economic settlement. “Legal real‑world payments have thus far been a very small use case for stablecoins,” said Hilary J. Allen in written evidence to a UK parliamentary committee.
Impact on B2B, cross-border stablecoin payments, and policy
Based on data from McKinsey, B2B stablecoin payments are estimated around US$226 billion annually, tiny relative to total B2B volumes, with even smaller shares in remittances and capital-markets settlement. The figures indicate niche traction rather than broad displacement of existing rails.
Policy perspectives emphasize business-case clarity over headline throughput. “For stablecoins to really serve as a means of retail payments, they must present both a compelling use case and a clear business case,” said Governor William (Brad) Waller of the Federal Reserve Board.
How experts define and measure stablecoin payments share
What counts as real payments vs on-chain or protocol transfers
Real payments are settlements for goods and services, remittances, and B2B invoices. On-chain transfers commonly include exchange internal movements, crypto-for-crypto trading, protocol-level operations, and bot-driven flows that do not settle commerce.
Sources: McKinsey, TD Economics, Hilary J. Allen, Federal Reserve Board
This article references estimates and perspectives from McKinsey & Company, TD Economics, Professor Hilary J. Allen, and the Federal Reserve Board to frame the current payments share and use cases.
FAQ about stablecoin payments share
How do McKinsey and TD Economics estimate stablecoin payments compared to total global payments?
McKinsey estimates about US$390 billion, or ~0.02% of global flows. TD Economics finds payments near 6% of stablecoin activity, far below trading-dominated volumes.
What qualifies as a real payment versus an on-chain or trading transfer?
Real payments settle goods, services, remittances, or B2B invoices. On-chain transfers include trading, exchange shuffling, protocol operations, and bot-driven movements not tied to commerce.
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Source: https://coincu.com/markets/stablecoins-stay-trading-led-as-research-shows-payments-lag/



