Circle Partners Polymarket to Integrate Native USDC, Eliminating Bridge Risk

24 minutes ago by · 2 mins read

Circle and Polymarket announced native USDC integration for the prediction market platform, removing bridging dependencies and settlement friction.

Circle and Polymarket announced a partnership today that will bring native USDC to the prediction market over the next few months, replacing the bridged stablecoin version traders currently use.

Polymarket runs entirely on Bridged USDC (USDC.e) through Polygon right now. Native USDC comes directly from Circle’s regulated entities and can be redeemed one-to-one for US dollars. Bridged tokens need intermediary protocols to move between blockchains, creating extra steps, issues and costs. Native versions eliminate that middleman, making transactions faster and more reliable for users trading billions monthly.

Some crypto analysts on X say that with this upgrade, Polymarket is eliminating bridging risk. It is well known in the industry that cross-chain bridges are the weakest link in hacking blockchains.

“Circle has built some of the most critical infrastructure in crypto, and partnering with them is an important step in strengthening prediction markets,” said Shayne Coplan, Founder and CEO of Polymarket, in Circle’s announcement. “Using USDC supports a consistent, dollar-denominated settlement standard that enhances market integrity and reliability as participation on the platform continues to grow.”

Polymarket Volume Growth Pushes Upgrade

Polymarket handled $3 billion in trading volume on Polygon during October 2025 with over 338,000 traders, and more than $22 billion in notional trading across the first eleven months of 2025—a 57% increase from 2024. Monthly volume stood at $7.66 billion in January 2026, according to The Block data, making it the second-largest prediction market worldwide.

Currently, Kalshi is the largest prediction market, with $9.55 billion in volume over the last month, likely driven by its alliance with Coinbase.

Monthly volume for Polymarket and Kalshi | Source: The Block data

Other platforms made similar switches in 2025 to improve liquidity and reduce settlement friction, as did the Aptos blockchain. Each migration streamlines how money moves through these systems.

The shift positions Polymarket closer to the settlement standards that major financial institutions expect. With regulators watching crypto prediction markets more closely, even jurisdictions like Portugal ordering a stop to political betting, standardized stablecoin infrastructure provides the platform with a stronger foundation as it scales toward mainstream finance.

Share:

Related Articles

Fidelity Launches FIDD Stablecoin on Ethereum, Joining Race Under US Stablecoin Law

By January 28th, 2026

The $17.5 trillion asset manager Fidelity Investments enters a market still dominated by Tether and Circle with its dollar-backed stablecoin.

Circle’s USYC Overtakes BlackRock’s BUIDL as Largest Tokenized Treasury Fund

By January 23rd, 2026

Binance holds 94% of all USYC tokens as the fund reaches $1.69B, edging past BlackRock’s BUIDL by roughly $6 million.

Circle Partners Intuit to Bring Stablecoin Services to Credit Karma, Turbotax, Quickbooks

By December 18th, 2025

Intuit announced a multi-year partnership with Circle to embed USDC stablecoin technology across its financial platform, promising enhanced payment solutions.

Exit mobile version