Non-USD Stablecoins:– Without a doubt, stablecoins are on a roll.
With more than $300 billion in circulating supply, stablecoins are now being accepted, even by Tradfi, as one of the industry’s most successful payment innovations. From cross-border transfers to merchant payments and remittances, stablecoins are increasingly becoming the backbone of digital payments.
However, a new ATH emerged this week that could point to the next phase of growth for the sector.
This happened when Non-USD stablecoins crossed $2 billion in circulating supply for the first time. In a market where USD-pegged stablecoins maintain the majory, this marked a record high for local currency-backed stablecoins.
Which countries are adopting non-USD stablecoins?
According to data cited in Arkham report, the growth of non-USD stablecoins is largely being driven by three major regional currencies: the euro, the Brazilian real and the Turkish lira. Together, these currencies account for a significant share of non-dollar stablecoin activity.
Europe remains the largest market for non-USD stablecoins. Euro-backed stablecoins account for roughly 20% of the non-USD stablecoin market, with Circle’s EURC emerging as the leading player in the segment.
Growing regulatory clarity under Europe’s MiCA framework has further accelerated adoption among institutions and fintech firms.
Beyond Europe, Latin America is increasingly becoming a hotspot. Brazil, already one of the region’s largest crypto markets, is witnessing growing interest in real-backed digital assets. Businesses in the region are exploring blockchain-based payment and settlement solutions.
Turkey is another market attracting attention. With high crypto adoption and ongoing currency volatility, lira-backed stablecoins are emerging as an alternative for users seeking faster and more efficient digital transactions. People are also earning money on stablecoin hooldings.
Why are non-USD stablecoins growing?
Non-USD stablecoins are growing for a simple reason. Some users do not want a “digital dollar”; they want a digital version of their own money. That matters for payroll, invoicing, remittances, treasury, and cross-border settlement.
The numbers are still small, but the direction is clear. As per data from ECB website, euro-denominated stablecoins rose from about €50 million at the start of 2024 to about €450 million by January 2026.
Euro stablecoins are getting institutional support too. The ECB says on e major EU bank is already issuing one while 12 other large EU banks have formed a consortium to launch a shared euro stablecoin.
Turkey’s $3.4 billion volume is largely tied to faster and cheaper cross-border transfers. Europe’s growth is being driven by treasury and B2B settlement under MiCA. Brazil is emerging as a payments and trade corridor market.
Africa, the Middle East and parts of South Asia are also beginning to emerge as promising markets. Nigeria, Indonesia, and South Africa are al showing strong demand for remittances and regional commerce.
In Japan, the FSA is backing a project from MUFG, SMFG and Mizuho to jointly issue yen stablecoins. JPYC has already launched a yen-pegged coin.
In Singapore, XSGD is Singapore’s dollar-backed stablecoin. MAS has developed a framework for SGD- or G10-pegged stablecoins. OKX recently launched merchant payments in Singapore that convert USDC/USDT into XSGD before merchants receive SGD.
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Crypto Businesses Eye Non-USD Stablecoins
As a result, blockchain networks including Base, Polygon and others are witnessing growing activity around Non-USD Stablecoins stablecoins.
The growth has caught the attention of industry executives.
“Stablecoins are the largest non-speculative use case of crypto,” Base executive David Tso said this week. He further added that the base network is now particularly interested in non-USD stablecoins across Latin America, Africa, the Middle East, South Asia and Southeast Asia. According to Tso, adoption is now “hockey-sticking” across several emerging markets.
Stablecoins are the largest non-speculative use case of crypto
At @base, we are particularly interested in non-USD stablecoins for LatAm, Africa, the Middle East, South Asia, and Southeast Asia, where fiat debasement and censorship are more prevalent
Adoption is hockey-sticking https://t.co/cH61s2o5ed
— David Tso (dave.base.eth) (@davidtsocy) June 8, 2026
The trend is also becoming visible on-chain. Polygon founder Sandeep Nailwal recently revealed that non-USD stablecoin transfer volume on Polygon has surpassed $900 million.
The world’s currencies are moving onchain.
JPYC is one of the fastest growing non-USD stablecoins on Polygon, reaching $74M in May. Its strongest month ever. pic.twitter.com/yYId7aZ0a7
— Polygon | POL (@0xPolygon) June 3, 2026
Can they challenge USDT and USDC?
Not globally, at least not yet. The BIS says about 98% of stablecoins are still dollar-denominated, and it puts the global stablecoin market at about $315 billion in early April 2026.
The ECB also says euro stablecoins are only about €450 million versus roughly $300 billion for dollar stablecoins. So the real fight is not “can a euro or yen coin beat USDT everywhere?”
It is more like: can local-currency stablecoins become the default rail inside their own region? That is much more realistic.
However, even though the $2 billion figure may appear small compared to the broader $315 billion stablecoin market, it points to an opportunity that many crypto businesses are beginning to watch closely.
For crypto businesses, the opportunity extends far beyond trading. Exchanges can offer local-currency pairs, payment firms can build regional settlement rails, and stablecoin issuers can tap entirely new user bases.
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