Stablecoins have spent years promising faster, cheaper, and more efficient payments.
The challenge has never been the concept. It has been the infrastructure.
While blockchain networks can handle impressive transaction volumes under normal conditions, many still struggle with unpredictable fees and performance bottlenecks when demand spikes. For businesses processing payroll, remittances, cross-border transfers, or B2B payments, that uncertainty creates a problem that finance teams simply cannot accept.
Polygon believes it has solved it.
The company announced that Polygon Chain, the settlement layer powering its Open Money Stack, can now process up to 5,000 payment transactions per second following a network upgrade that significantly increases throughput while maintaining low and predictable fees.
The milestone places Polygon in the same performance conversation as major global payment networks, while preserving the benefits that have made stablecoins attractive in the first place: near-instant settlement, programmable transactions, and significantly lower costs.
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The Stablecoin Opportunity Keeps Growing
The announcement arrives as stablecoins continue their rapid transition from crypto-native tools to mainstream financial infrastructure.
Over the past year, stablecoin adoption has accelerated across payments, remittances, treasury management, and international commerce. Companies ranging from fintech startups to multinational enterprises have begun experimenting with blockchain-based settlement as an alternative to traditional banking rails.
That momentum has attracted some of the world's largest financial and technology companies.
Last December, Stripe expanded global USDC payments on Polygon, enabling merchants across more than 150 countries to settle transactions using stablecoins. Earlier this year, Polygon also moved deeper into payments infrastructure through acquisitions designed to strengthen fiat on-ramps, wallet services, and enterprise payment capabilities.
Polygon processed approximately $79 billion in stablecoin volume during May alone and finished the month with a record $3.7 billion in stablecoin supply circulating across the network.
The network's growth reflects that trend.
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