
Western Union launches USDPT, a dollar-backed Solana stablecoin to replace SWIFT-era settlement, cutting cross-border remittance costs and running 24/7 on-chain.
Summary
- Western Union has launched USDPT, a US dollar-backed stablecoin on the Solana blockchain, issued by Anchorage Digital Bank and backed 1:1 with dollars.
- USDPT will be embedded into Western Union’s global payment infrastructure as an on-chain settlement layer for agents, partners, and future consumer apps.
- The token is designed to replace parts of the firm’s SWIFT-based settlement, enabling faster, cheaper cross-border transfers across its 360,000-plus cash pickup locations.
Western Union has confirmed the launch of its USDPT stablecoin on the Solana network, describing it as a “U.S. Dollar Payment Token” issued by Anchorage Digital Bank and “fully backed one-to-one by U.S. dollars held in custody.”
Stablecoin becomes core settlement rail
According to the company’s announcement, USDPT will be “directly integrated into Western Union’s global payment system” and used as a dedicated on-chain settlement layer between the firm, its agents, and institutional partners, rather than a speculative crypto asset.
The token will initially serve as an internal settlement mechanism “for cross-border payments and agent funding,” with Western Union emphasizing that the goal is to “combine blockchain settlement efficiency with Western Union’s global compliance and distribution network.”
Replacing SWIFT for agent funding
Earlier disclosures showed that Western Union intends USDPT to act as an alternative to traditional correspondent banking, with one filing stating that the stablecoin is meant to “replace SWIFT-dependent settlement infrastructure” used to fund agents in more than 200 countries.
Anchorage Digital Bank, a U.S.-regulated institution, will handle issuance and custody, while infrastructure provider Crossmint is supplying wallets and APIs that plug USDPT into Western Union’s digital asset network and its 360,000-plus cash collection points.
Chief executive Devin McGranahan recently told analysts that “at the foundation of our strategy is USDPT, our U.S. dollar-backed stablecoin,” adding that the token is designed to support “faster, cheaper global money transfers” and to keep settling “through weekends and banking holidays” when legacy rails are closed.
By choosing Solana, the company is betting on high throughput and low transaction fees, with one explainer noting that on-chain remittance transactions can complete “in seconds with negligible costs,” a shift that could meaningfully lower the 5%–10% fees typical of traditional cross-border transfers.
A recent crypto.news briefing highlighted how USDPT will connect digital dollar transfers to Western Union’s global cash-out network, linking on-chain transactions with local currency payouts.
Another crypto.news overview examined how incumbents like Western Union are joining stablecoin giants in testing on-chain settlement for remittances to cut costs and settlement risk.
A separate crypto.news analysis underscored Solana’s growing role as a hub for remittance-focused stablecoins, citing USDPT as a flagship example of regulated payment tokens moving real-world money flows onto public chains.