Stablecoins are moving closer to everyday spending in South Korea as Hana Financial Group begins a new USDC payment pilot for foreign visitors.
Hana Financial Group has started a new pilot program that allows foreign customers visiting South Korea to pay local merchants using USDC-linked Visa cards. The effort is being led by Hana Card, the group’s card unit, in partnership with Circle and Crypto.com.
The program is designed to test whether stablecoin based payments can work smoothly inside South Korea’s regulated card system while also giving tourists a simple incentive to try the service through 5% CRO cashback.
The pilot focuses on inbound travelers and other international visitors to South Korea. Users can fund a Crypto.com Visa card with USDC and then use that card at participating merchants across the country. Customers who qualify through a balance or recharge history in USDC can receive 5% cashback in CRO, the native token of Crypto.com.
For Hana, this is more than a short term promotion. The group is using the pilot to measure how practical crypto-linked payments can be in a real retail setting. It also wants to understand whether merchants can benefit from new spending demand coming from digital asset users.
Because Hana Card reportedly handles about 50% of foreign card acquiring in South Korea, the company is in a strong position to run this kind of test at scale. That reach gives the pilot added weight, since it places the experiment inside a major existing payments channel rather than a limited crypto only environment.
The new payment initiative also reflects a deeper relationship between Hana and Circle. In December 2025, Hana Card signed a strategic agreement with Circle to expand USDC payment and settlement use cases, along with joint marketing efforts.
That followed an earlier May 2025 memorandum of understanding between Hana Bank and Circle. That agreement explored broader stablecoin opportunities, including cross-border remittances and treasury services. Together, those steps show that the latest pilot is part of a wider digital asset strategy rather than a one off campaign.
Crypto.com adds another important layer to the project by providing a familiar card product that can connect stablecoin balances with merchant payments. This gives Hana a practical way to test digital asset spending through infrastructure consumers already understand.
The timing is notable. South Korea is continuing to refine its Digital Asset Basic Act, while major financial groups position themselves for future regulation expected in 2026. Banks in the country have also been exploring possible won-denominated stablecoin projects, which makes Hana’s latest move an early indicator of where the market could be heading.
Rather than waiting for the final regulatory framework, Hana appears to be building hands on experience now. That may help the group prepare for a future in which stablecoins are used not only for crypto trading, but also for payments, remittances, and settlement services inside mainstream finance.
A Hana Financial Group official described the pilot as an early validation step for that future. The official said:
In my experience, the most important crypto stories are the ones that quietly push digital assets into normal daily life, and this is one of them. I found Hana’s pilot especially meaningful because it does not treat stablecoins as a niche product for traders. Instead, it puts USDC, Visa, and a major bank backed card network into the same real world payment flow. That is the kind of step that can turn stablecoins from a market tool into a consumer payment option.
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