Overview

Circle was founded in 2013 by Jeremy Allaire and Sean Neville. The company launched USDC in 2018 through the Centre Consortium with Coinbase, and has since grown it into a dollar-backed stablecoin with $78.7 billion in circulation as of March 2026.

Circle listed on the NYSE in June 2025 under the ticker CRCL. The IPO, led by JPMorgan Chase, Citi, and Goldman Sachs, raised over $1.1 billion with shares surging 168 percent on the first day of trading. FY2025 revenue reached $2.7 billion, up 64 percent year over year, driven primarily by interest income on US Treasury reserves backing USDC.

The product suite extends beyond USDC issuance. Circle Mint provides institutional on and off-ramps. The Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol (CCTP) enables native USDC transfers across 19 blockchains. EURC serves the euro-denominated market under MiCA compliance. And Circle's programmable wallets and developer APIs power stablecoin integration for enterprises including Visa, Mastercard, Coinbase, and Stripe.

What We Like

Regulatory position that no competitor has matched. Circle was the first global stablecoin issuer to achieve MiCA compliance, securing an Electronic Money Institution licence in France and FCA authorisation in the UK. In the US, Circle holds money transmitter licences in 46 states plus DC and Puerto Rico, a New York BitLicense, and FinCEN Money Services Business registration. The SEC's April 2025 clarification that fully reserved stablecoins are not securities further solidified USDC's legal standing. The OCC conditionally approved Circle for a national trust bank charter in December 2025.

CCTP V2 solves the fragmentation problem. Cross-chain USDC transfers historically relied on wrapped tokens and third-party bridges, each introducing counterparty risk. CCTP V2 burns USDC on the source chain and mints natively on the destination chain, eliminating bridge risk entirely. The V2 upgrade added Fast Transfers (seconds instead of minutes from Ethereum L2s) and Hooks for atomic cross-chain execution.

Settlement layer for the x402 protocol. USDC is the default settlement token for x402, the HTTP-native payment protocol co-founded by Coinbase and Cloudflare. As we covered in our analysis of x402, this positions USDC as the payment rail for autonomous agent commerce. Circle's VP of Product Management has called x402 "a powerful new standard for making stablecoin payments a first-class citizen of the web."

Transaction volume tells the adoption story. USDC captured 64 percent of stablecoin transaction volume in March 2026, surpassing Tether's USDT for the first time in nearly a decade. Onchain transaction volume hit $11.9 trillion in Q4 2025 alone, up 247 percent year over year. Partners including Mastercard, Visa, Coinbase, Stripe, and Shopify are building on USDC rails.

What to Watch

Revenue concentration on interest income. 95.5 percent of Circle's H1 2026 revenue comes from interest earned on the US Treasury reserves backing USDC. If interest rates fall, Circle's margins compress significantly. The company is diversifying into platform fees and services, but the dependency is real today.

Redemption fees are climbing. Circle Mint minting remains free, but redemption fees for amounts over $2 million have been raised twice in the past 18 months, now reaching 0.1 percent for transactions above $15 million. Standard two-day redemptions remain free, but institutional users requiring instant liquidity are paying more.

Tether still leads on market cap. USDT holds approximately $186 billion in circulation versus USDC's $78.7 billion. While USDC is winning on transaction volume share and institutional adoption, Tether's dominance in emerging markets and non-regulated corridors remains formidable.

Pricing and Deployment

Circle Mint is free for qualified institutional customers to mint USDC. Redemption fees apply for instant settlements above $2 million per day, starting at 0.03 percent and scaling to 0.1 percent above $15 million. Standard two-day redemptions are free. Developer APIs and CCTP are accessible through Circle's developer portal. Deployment is API-first with SDKs for TypeScript, Python, and multiple blockchain environments.

Compliance and Security

Circle holds SOC 2 Type II certification, money transmitter licences in 46 US states plus DC and Puerto Rico, a New York BitLicense, and FinCEN MSB registration. In Europe, Circle was the first stablecoin issuer to achieve MiCA compliance with EMI and DASP licences from French regulators and FCA authorisation in the UK. USDC reserves are held in segregated accounts and attested monthly by a Big Four accounting firm.

Rating

Criteria

Score

Notes

Accuracy & Effectiveness

4.5/5

$78.7B in circulation; 64% transaction volume share; proven at scale

Ease of Setup

4/5

API-first with comprehensive SDKs; Circle Mint onboarding is institutional-grade

Integration Flexibility

4.5/5

CCTP V2 across 19 chains; REST APIs; x402 native; Visa/Mastercard partnerships

Compliance & Security

5/5

SOC 2 Type II; MiCA-first; 46-state MTL; BitLicense; OCC charter pending

Support Quality

4/5

Institutional account management; developer community; enterprise SLAs

Scalability

5/5

$11.9T quarterly onchain volume; multi-chain native via CCTP

Documentation

4/5

Comprehensive developer docs and API playground; CCTP migration guides

Pricing Transparency

3/5

Free minting but tiered redemption fees; institutional pricing not fully public

Overall: 4.3/5

Verdict

Circle is the clear choice for enterprises, fintechs, and payment platforms that need regulated stablecoin infrastructure with global coverage. The combination of MiCA compliance, US state licensing, SOC 2 certification, and integration into the x402 settlement layer creates a regulatory moat that no competitor currently matches. Organisations operating exclusively in unregulated corridors or needing the deepest emerging-market liquidity may find Tether's reach more practical. The interest-rate dependency is a genuine risk to monitor. But with $2.7 billion in FY2025 revenue, a public listing, and the Arc blockchain initiative bringing Visa, Mastercard, and BlackRock into its orbit, Circle is positioned as the institutional default for programmable dollars.

Try Circle: circle.com

Sources

USDC now settles more transaction volume than any other stablecoin. As programmable dollars become the default settlement layer for AI agents and enterprise payments, is your infrastructure ready for the shift?

Editorial disclaimer: Reviews reflect the independent editorial assessment of Major Matters and are not sponsored or endorsed by the companies reviewed. We recommend conducting your own evaluation to determine whether any product is the right fit for your specific requirements.

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