PayPal’s PYUSD stablecoin has expanded to the Polygon network, giving users access to the dollar-pegged token on one of the lowest-cost blockchain networks available today.
The expansion makes PYUSD available beyond its initial Ethereum deployment. Polygon is listed as a supported blockchain for Paxos-issued assets, confirming the technical foundation for PYUSD on the network. For related coverage, see Visa, Mastercard and Coinbase Join OpenUSD as Partners: What It Means.
PayPal has been steadily building out its crypto infrastructure, including launching peer-to-peer payment links with crypto integration and enabling PYUSD payouts for YouTube creators in the U.S.
Why Polygon fits PayPal’s stablecoin strategy
Polygon processes transactions at a fraction of Ethereum’s gas costs. For a payments-focused stablecoin like PYUSD, high fees on Ethereum have been a practical barrier to everyday use cases like remittances or small purchases.
By deploying on Polygon, PYUSD becomes viable for lower-value transfers where Ethereum L1 fees would otherwise consume a disproportionate share of the transaction. PayPal’s developer documentation for crypto payment methods signals the company’s intent to integrate digital assets into its broader checkout ecosystem.
The move aligns with a broader pattern of stablecoin issuers seeking multi-chain distribution. PYUSD’s market cap has surged since its initial launch, and Polygon availability could accelerate that growth by unlocking DeFi integrations and wallet support across the network’s ecosystem.
What this means for stablecoin competition on Polygon
PYUSD on Polygon enters a network already home to USDC and USDT liquidity. The differentiator is PayPal’s existing user base of over 400 million accounts, which could funnel mainstream users into on-chain stablecoin activity without requiring them to navigate unfamiliar infrastructure.
For Polygon’s ecosystem, adding a PayPal-backed stablecoin strengthens the network’s positioning as a consumer-facing chain. Projects building payments, lending, or commerce applications on Polygon now have another fiat-backed stablecoin option with direct ties to a major fintech platform.
The competitive landscape among stablecoin initiatives from major players continues to intensify, with network availability becoming a key battleground alongside regulatory compliance and institutional backing.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.





