The on-chain credit card: Stablecoin credit moves from experiment to infrastructure
- What does banking look like when money can be spent outside the traditional account structure?
- June's announcements point to a new model: card programs backed by tokenized dollars. But stablecoin-backed credit raises three harder questions.
Coinbase, Visa and its partners, and blockchain infrastructure firms like Rain and Bridge are pushing an uncomfortable line of inquiry for incumbents: what happens when money can be spent without ever being routed through a bank account?
The answer, emerging across multiple announcements in June 2026, is a new category of card programs that don’t originate in deposits but in tokenized dollar balances.
From a trading-focused asset to a mainstream payments medium
Coinbase’s new card, built with Cardless, sits at the starting point of this shift.
It is designed for stablecoin holders who sit outside the traditional credit system. Instead of requiring unsecured credit approval, it uses stablecoin balances held on Coinbase as collateral, allowing users to access a credit line based on digital asset holdings.
“People apply from all different parts of the credit spectrum. There are some people that want to use this method because they believe in cryptocurrency, but they’re just beginning their journeys and accumulating wealth,” explained Cardless co-founder Michael Spelfogel.
Stablecoins here are not treated as payment currency in the traditional sense. They function more like a balance sheet input closer to collateral.
The move also reflects Coinbase’s broader trajectory: from exchange to wallet to financial platform that increasingly tries to retain users’ assets within its ecosystem while still enabling them to participate in the real economy.
But issuing access is only the first layer. Once stablecoin-backed credit exists, the system still has to answer three harder questions:
…
