Coinbase, Visa, BlackRock, 140 others join to launch Open USD

- Over 140 financial giants have joined to launch the Open USD (OUSD) stablecoin.
- OUSD will launch on Solana later this year.
- Earnings from the OUSD will be shared by all the partners.
More than 140 companies have joined to launch a stablecoin dubbed Open USD (OUSD) on Solana.
The partners include Visa, Stripe, Mastercard, American Express, and a long list of giants spanning payments, global banks, and crypto platforms, such as Coinbase, Ripple, Bybit, and Solana.
Open USD will be owned and operated by the partner through an independent company, Open Standard, according to the announcement on Tuesday.
Open USD launches on Solana this year
The stablecoin is expected to launch natively on Solana from day one later in 2026.
BREAKING: Open USD is launching natively on Solana from day one.
— Solana (@solana) June 30, 2026
A new shared stablecoin, owned and governed by its partners. No mint or redeem fees, no volume caps, and nearly all the reserve economics flow back to the businesses building it. https://t.co/s4WJ89DA9B pic.twitter.com/eWyK0JsLmB
Open Standard’s founding CEO, Zach Abrams, framed the initiative as a response to pain points that existing stablecoins create at enterprise scale.
Abrams said businesses currently face fees for minting and redeeming tokens, have limited access to reserve yields, and depend on roadmaps set by a single issuer.
“Existing stablecoins have great strengths, but to use them at scale, businesses need something that’s open, low-cost, high-throughput, broadly accessible, and aligned to their interests,” said Open Standard CEO.
Per the announcement, businesses can mint and redeem Open USD at no cost, with no artificial volume limits. All earnings from Open USD’s reserves will be shared by partners.
Stripe to make Open USD its default stablecoin
The partners are throwing heavy support for Open USD, with payment giant Stripe already planning to make Open USD its default stablecoin.
“Businesses need a stablecoin designed to work at a global, industrial scale. And not at the scale of the 2026 economy, but of the 2040 economy, with flurries of activity we can only begin to imagine, that’s why Open USD will be the default stablecoin for businesses running on Stripe,” said Will Gaybrick, President of Technology and Business at Stripe.
Open USD comes as interests and total market cap of stablecoins continue to swell, currently at $298 billion, according to data from Messari.
BNY’s Chief Product and Innovation Officer, Carolyn Weinberg, anticipates that stablecoins alone may grow to $1.5 trillion by 2030, adding that a stablecoin such as Open USD with neutral governance and shared economics “has potential to unlock the next phase of digital assets growth.”
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FAQs
What is Open USD (OUSD)?
Open USD is a new stablecoin operated by Open Standard, an independent company governed by a board of its partner firms, designed for global payments and settlement with no fees to mint or redeem and no volume caps.
Which companies are backing Open USD?
More than 140 firms have joined, including Visa, Stripe, Mastercard, American Express, BlackRock, BNY, Coinbase, Google, Samsung Electronics, Shopify, DoorDash, and crypto platforms such as Solana, OKX, Ripple, and Aave.
How does Open USD differ from existing stablecoins like USDT and USDC?
Unlike single-issuer stablecoins, Open USD charges no mint or redeem fees, imposes no volume caps, returns nearly all reserve earnings to partner businesses, and is governed collectively by its partners rather than by one company.
Disclaimer. The information provided is not trading advice. Cryptopolitan.com holds no liability for any investments made based on the information provided on this page. We strongly recommend independent research and/or consultation with a qualified professional before making any investment decisions.

Ibiam Wayas
Ibiam Wayas has covered the crypto news beat since 2019. He studied Computer Science at National Open University of Nigeria. His work has appeared on various crypto news platforms, including Coinfomania, Crypto News Australia, and AltcoinBuzz. Drawing on his background in Computer Science, he now focuses on crypto, robotics, and longevity news.
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