Back to solutions
Solution pageEcommerce checkout

Ecommerce stablecoin payment gateway for USDC, USDT, and EURC

Accept stablecoin payments on ecommerce websites with USDC, USDT, and EURC. Add hosted checkout or one payment API while keeping orders, fulfillment, support, and reconciliation intact.

This page is for ecommerce merchants evaluating a stablecoin payment gateway for an online store, WooCommerce storefront, or custom checkout. Stablecoin checkout should feel like a new payment method for the buyer, not a second store for the merchant. The right setup lets shoppers pay with USDC, USDT, or EURC while your team still sees a normal order, a clear payment status, and a fulfillment path it already understands.

Accept stablecoin payments where card checkout is expensive

Ecommerce stablecoin payments are strongest when they solve a payment problem the store already has. They are not a reason to redesign every checkout path on day one.

For most merchants, the first good use case is a narrow one: cross-border demand, expensive card processing, chargeback-prone categories, or a customer segment that already asks to pay with USDC, USDT, or another stablecoin.

  • Prioritize cross-border ecommerce orders where card approval and FX friction already hurt conversion.
  • Use stablecoin payments on higher-value products or digital goods where fee savings and chargeback reduction matter.
  • Start with wallet-ready buyers instead of forcing every shopper through a crypto checkout flow.

Design stablecoin checkout as a normal payment method

A strong buyer flow is plain: select stablecoin, confirm USDC, USDT, or EURC, choose the supported network, pay from a wallet, then see the order move forward. The page should not assume the buyer understands every payment detail.

That clarity protects conversion. Card buyers can keep using cards, while wallet-ready buyers get a stablecoin checkout path that matches how they already hold funds.

  • Show stablecoins next to familiar payment methods, not behind a separate crypto page.
  • Display only the stablecoins and networks your checkout can complete reliably.
  • Return the buyer to an order confirmation that explains what happens next.

Connect hosted checkout and payment API to order operations

The merchant experience matters as much as the buyer page. A stablecoin payment gateway works when the payment is tied to the order, the success state is reliable, and the support team can explain what happened without asking engineering for every exception.

Before launch, decide how your store handles payment expiry, wrong-token attempts, delayed confirmations, refunds, and reconciliation. Those details make the difference between a usable ecommerce payment gateway and a support queue.

  • Create orders and payment records before sending the buyer to hosted checkout.
  • Use payment status updates to mark orders paid, expired, underpaid, or requiring review.
  • Prepare support, refund handling, and reconciliation before the first public launch.

Scale ecommerce stablecoin payments with clean metrics

The safest launch is visible enough to measure and narrow enough to fix quickly. Once orders, support, and finance all treat stablecoin payments as routine, you can promote the option more broadly across the store and its ecommerce checkout surfaces.

  • Launch to one product group, region, or buyer segment first.
  • Compare stablecoin checkout completion and fee savings against your card baseline.
  • Expand USDC, USDT, EURC, and network support only after support tickets and reconciliation stay predictable.

FAQ

Which ecommerce orders should accept stablecoin payments first?

Start with the order types where card fees, international payment friction, or chargeback exposure already create a visible cost. Cross-border ecommerce orders, higher-value products, digital goods, and repeat buyers are usually better pilots than the whole catalog.

How does stablecoin checkout work for buyers?

The buyer chooses stablecoin at checkout, sees the supported token and network, pays USDC, USDT, or EURC from a wallet, and returns to a clear order confirmation. Your store should update the order from payment status updates instead of relying only on the browser session.

What should merchants measure after adding a crypto payment gateway?

Track checkout completion, stablecoin payment volume, payment method mix, fee savings versus cards, support tickets by token and network, order exceptions, and time spent reconciling payments.

Ecommerce stablecoin payment guides

Start with how to accept stablecoin payments online, then compare USDC, USDT, EURC, card fees, and checkout launch details.