Visa and WeFi wire self-custody stablecoins straight into card payments

Visa and WeFi wire self-custody stablecoins straight into card payments

Visa partners with WeFi to enable direct stablecoin spending from self-custody wallets on Visa’s network, bypassing exchanges and pressuring banks’ FX roles.

Summary
  • Visa has partnered with WeFi, an “on‑chain bank” founded by Tether co‑founder Reeve Collins, to let users spend stablecoins from self‑custody wallets directly on the global Visa network.
  • The rollout begins in select markets across Europe, Asia, and Latin America, with expansion conditioned on local regulatory approvals and a focus on “regulated stablecoins appropriate for everyday transactions.”
  • By embedding stablecoins into Visa’s payment rails so settlement happens in the background, the partnership directly bridges DeFi liquidity to millions of merchants and puts pressure on banks’ traditional role in FX and settlement.

Visa’s new partnership with WeFi is designed to make stablecoin balances in self‑custody wallets spendable anywhere Visa is accepted, without users first moving funds through centralized exchanges or bank accounts. WeFi describes itself as a “de‑bank” and “on‑chain bank,” offering both self‑custody and custodial wallets plus card rails, and now tying those directly into Visa so that stablecoin funding and fiat settlement happen behind the scenes while the front‑end looks like a normal card payment.

Stablecoins plug into Visa without parking on exchanges

According to a report from Yahoo Finance, Visa and WeFi will “enable users to utilize stablecoin‑backed balances through familiar payment options,” a model executives frame as merging “on‑chain banking” with Visa’s global network. Mathieu Altwegg, Visa’s head of product and solutions for Europe, said the objective is to “connect new value forms to payment experiences that people are already familiar with, all while adhering to existing regulatory frameworks.”

The rollout starts in select European, Asian, and Latin American markets, with Visa stressing that the initial focus will be on regulated stablecoins that fit into existing licensing regimes such as Europe’s MiCA. A ChainNess summary of the partnership notes that WeFi plans to offer personal IBANs that “can be used like traditional bank accounts,” but with stablecoins as the funding layer and Visa as the acceptance network.

Banks’ FX and settlement role comes under pressure

For users, the pitch is simple: hold stablecoins in a self‑custody wallet, tap a Visa card or use familiar payment flows, and let the conversion and settlement logic run under the hood at the protocol and network layers. As WeFi’s own marketing puts it, the aim is to “bring stablecoins from theory into real, practical utility,” using Visa as the bridge that gives merchants the same experience and risk profile they’re used to, while users stay on‑chain.

That model compresses some of the traditional roles of banks in foreign exchange and cross‑border settlement. If stablecoin balances can fund card payments directly and settle almost instantly through Visa’s networks, banks risk losing a slice of fee revenue historically tied to slow, account‑based FX flows and correspondent banking.

Visa has been building toward this for several years, from its Bridge stablecoin card‑issuing product to a stablecoin payout pilot for gig workers and a more recent partnership with BVNK for stablecoin‑powered Visa Direct payments. The WeFi tie‑up extends that strategy into the realm of self‑custody and “on‑chain banking,” moving stablecoins from the edges of the system into everyday card payments at scale.

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