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How to Accept USDC Payments as a Business

If you're a business considering stablecoin payments, or migrating from USDT, this guide covers everything: why USDC became the standard, how it compares to what came before, what the setup looks like, and what to expect once you're live.
How to Accept USDC Payments as a Business
Last updated: May 29, 2026 9 min read
VB
Vilius Barbaravičius

Stablecoins now account for nearly 30% of all crypto payments processed through CoinGate. That’s not a projection or an industry estimate. That’s what the data from over 1.42 million crypto payments in 2025 shows.

But the landscape underneath that number has shifted in ways most businesses haven’t caught up with yet.

USDT, the stablecoin that dominated for years, lost its EU footing after MiCA regulation came into effect. Tether, its issuer, didn’t secure compliance under the new framework. Circle, the company behind USDC, did. And as a result, USDC became the default stablecoin for businesses operating in Europe.

If you’re a business considering stablecoin payments, or migrating from USDT, this guide covers everything: why USDC became the standard, how it compares to what came before, what the setup looks like, and what to expect once you’re live.

Why USDC Is the Stablecoin Businesses Are Choosing in 2026

The answer starts with regulation. MiCA, the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets framework, introduced clear rules for stablecoin issuers operating in Europe. Circle secured full licensing. USDC is now a regulated stablecoin under EU law, and that status carries weight for any business that needs to justify its payment infrastructure to compliance teams or auditors.

This distinction matters more than it might seem. Businesses operating in the EU face real regulatory risk when accepting non-compliant stablecoins. USDT was restricted or delisted by multiple EU-based providers, including us, specifically because Tether did not meet MiCA requirements.

CoinGate mica

The market responded accordingly. USDC payment volume on CoinGate grew 1,264% year-over-year in 2025. That’s a full-scale migration, driven by businesses and their customers moving to the compliant option.

On top of the regulatory clarity, USDC is backed 1:1 by US dollar reserves, audited monthly by Deloitte, and transparent in its reserve composition. These aren’t just technical details. For risk-conscious businesses, they’re the reason USDC is winning the trust that USDT spent years building.

Customer preference is following the same trajectory. As more providers dropped USDT support in the EU, USDC became the stablecoin customers see at checkout. That momentum is self-reinforcing. More merchants accept it, more customers choose it, and the cycle continues.

For businesses evaluating which stablecoin to accept, the decision is increasingly straightforward. USDC is the one that works within the rules.

USDC vs. USDT – What Changed and Why It Matters

For years, USDT was the dominant stablecoin. It had the liquidity, the trading volume, and the merchant familiarity. None of that disappeared overnight. What changed was the regulatory ground beneath it.

MiCA’s stablecoin provisions required issuers to hold adequate reserves, maintain transparency standards, and obtain licensing within the EU. Circle met those requirements. Tether did not. As a result, EU-based exchanges and payment providers were left with a binary choice: adjust their stablecoin offerings or delist USDT entirely. Many chose the latter.

For merchants, the practical implication is clear. Accepting USDT in the EU now carries compliance risk. USDC doesn’t. If your business previously processed stablecoin payments through USDT and you operate in Europe, the migration to USDC is less about preference and more about regulatory necessity.

However, this applies specifically to the EU. In other jurisdictions, USDT remains widely available and commonly used. The shift is regulatory in nature, not technical. If your business serves global customers, some may still prefer USDT where it’s supported. But for EU operations, USDC is the clear path forward.

usdc vs usdt
We covered the full comparison between the two stablecoins in a dedicated article, including differences in reserve structure, transparency, and issuer licensing.

How USDC Payments Work for Merchants

The payment flow is simple. A customer selects crypto at checkout, chooses USDC, and sends payment to the address displayed. The payment gateway receives it and settles the merchant in EUR, USD, or USDC – depending on how the merchant has configured their account.

What makes USDC particularly attractive for merchants is the stability. Because it’s pegged 1:1 to the US dollar, there’s virtually no volatility between the moment a customer pays and the moment you receive the funds. Compare that to accepting Bitcoin or Ethereum, where the price can shift meaningfully during the settlement window. With USDC, that risk is essentially removed.

This near-zero volatility makes USDC the easiest crypto to accept for businesses that want to avoid price exposure entirely. You still get the core advantages of crypto payments – lower processing fees, zero chargebacks, access to a global customer base – without the market swings that make finance teams hesitant.

For many businesses, this is what tips the scale. The idea of accepting crypto is appealing, but the volatility concern has always been the first objection. USDC removes that objection from the conversation entirely.

For merchants who settle in fiat, the conversion happens instantly at the time of payment. No waiting, no exposure. We wrote about how instant crypto-to-fiat conversion works if you want the full technical picture.

On the other hand, if you’d rather keep USDC in your balance and withdraw later, that’s an option too. The settlement model is flexible, and you can mix fiat and crypto settlement based on what your business needs.

USDC also runs on multiple blockchain networks, which brings us to a topic worth understanding.

Multi-Chain USDC: What Merchants Should Know

USDC exists on several blockchain networks. Same token, same value, different rails. Your customers can pay from whichever network suits them best: Ethereum, Solana, Base, Polygon, or BSC.

Here’s how the networks compare in practice:

  • Ethereum: the most established network, but comes with higher transaction fees.
  • Solana, Base, Polygon: faster confirmations with significantly lower fees. Increasingly popular for everyday payments.
  • BSC (BNB Smart Chain): another low-cost option, widely used in certain markets.

The differences between networks matter to the customer, not to you. We handle multi-chain routing automatically. Customers pick the network. You get paid the same way regardless.

This is a real advantage for the checkout experience. A buyer on Solana doesn’t need to bridge their assets to Ethereum before paying. They send USDC on their preferred network, and your settlement stays consistent regardless of where the payment originated.

There’s nothing extra to configure on the merchant side. Multi-chain support is enabled by default. You focus on running your business. We handle the routing.

Setting Up USDC Payments

The setup process is faster than most businesses expect. Here’s what it looks like:

Step 1: Create a merchant account. It’s free. Standard KYC verification is required, which is the norm for any licensed payment provider. 

Step 2: Enable USDC in your accepted currencies. You can accept USDC alongside Bitcoin, Litecoin, Ethereum, and other supported cryptocurrencies. It’s not an either-or decision.

Step 3: Choose your settlement preference. Options include EUR via bank transfer, keeping USDC in your balance, or a mix of both. If the distinction between settlement and payouts isn’t clear, we broke it down in a separate guide.

settlements vs withdrawals vs payouts

Step 4: Integrate. For online stores running on WooCommerce, PrestaShop, or Shopware, we have plugins that make this a few-click setup. For custom platforms or marketplaces, the API gives you full control over the checkout experience.

The processing fee is 1%. No hidden conversion spreads. No additional markups.

From account creation to accepting your first USDC payment, the entire process can realistically be completed in a single sitting. Plugin integrations typically take minutes. API integrations take hours, not weeks.

Who’s Already Accepting USDC?

Stablecoin adoption tends to be strongest in industries where price predictability matters, cross-border payments are frequent, and traditional payment methods create friction.

Proxy services are a clear example. Companies like PlainProxies, IPRoyal, and ProxyScrape already process a significant share of their transactions in crypto. Crypto accounts for 30–75% of all payments in the proxy industry as our study shows, and USDC is increasingly the stablecoin of choice as USDT support declines across European platforms.

SaaS companies and digital service providers are another growing segment. International billing comes with friction: card declines in certain regions, slow wire transfers, chargeback disputes that eat into margins. USDC payments sidestep most of these pain points while providing predictable settlement.

B2B invoicing is gaining traction as well. For businesses sending and receiving payments across borders, settling in USDC cuts out the delays and intermediary fees associated with traditional bank transfers. When both parties are comfortable with stablecoins, the transaction can settle in minutes instead of days.

Subscription-based services are another natural fit. Customers who already hold crypto often prefer paying for recurring services in USDC because the value stays predictable. There’s no conversion anxiety on either side of the transaction.

The pattern is consistent. Wherever businesses deal with global customers and need fast, predictable settlement, USDC is finding its place.

Getting Started

USDC has become the stablecoin standard for EU-compliant businesses, and its adoption is accelerating across industries. It’s stable, transparent, and backed by the kind of regulatory clarity that other stablecoins lack in Europe.

For merchants already accepting crypto, adding USDC is a natural next step. For businesses exploring stablecoin payments for the first time, it’s the most straightforward starting point available. The setup takes minutes. The processing is clean. And with MiCA licensing in place, the compliance question is already answered.

Thinking it’s time to add stablecoin payments to your business? Create a CoinGate account and go live in minutes.

Common Questions

Is USDC safe?

USDC is backed 1:1 by US dollar reserves held in regulated financial institutions. It’s audited monthly by Deloitte and issued by Circle, which holds a MiCA license in the EU. Among stablecoins, it’s one of the most transparent and well-regulated options available.

Can I accept both USDC and other cryptocurrencies?

Yes. Most merchants accept multiple coins and stablecoins at the same time. Customers see a selection at checkout and pick what works best for them.

What about refunds in USDC?

Refunds are supported through our refund feature. You can initiate them from the merchant dashboard or programmatically via the API.

Do I need to understand blockchain to accept USDC?

No. The payment gateway handles all the technical complexity on your behalf. You set your preferred settlement currency, connect a payout destination, and the rest is managed automatically.

What if I currently accept USDT?

If you operate in the EU, migrating to USDC is the recommended path. The setup is identical, and your customers will find USDC at checkout in the same way they previously found USDT. The transition is seamless from the merchant side.

VB
Vilius Barbaravičius Posted: June 3, 2026
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Accept crypto with CoinGate

Accept crypto with confidence using everything you need in one platform.