According to a recent LinkedIn post from Mesh, stablecoin-linked card spending reportedly grew 673% in 2025 to $4.5 billion, described as the fastest-growing segment in what is characterized as real stablecoin payment usage. The post attributes this growth to the ability of card rails to translate on-chain balances into fiat at the point of sale, enabling users to spend crypto while merchants receive local currency.
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The company’s LinkedIn post highlights that this model relies on an infrastructure layer handling bridging, routing, and conversion between digital assets and traditional payment systems. The post suggests that Mesh’s platform is designed around this same card-based conversion framework, implying potential exposure to a rapidly expanding niche in crypto payments and a business model aligned with growing real-world usage rather than purely speculative activity.
For investors, the emphasis on card-mediated stablecoin payments points to a thesis that near-term adoption of crypto in commerce may occur via familiar card networks rather than direct on-chain merchant acceptance. If Mesh can capture meaningful transaction volume within this infrastructure layer, the growth metrics cited for the broader segment could translate into higher take rates, increased payment flows, and improved monetization prospects over time.
The post also underscores the role of infrastructure providers as critical intermediaries between consumers’ digital-asset holdings and merchants’ fiat-denominated revenues. This positioning may offer Mesh opportunities for recurring revenue from transaction fees and partnerships with card issuers, processors, or wallets, while also exposing the company to regulatory developments and competitive pressure in the broader payments and crypto infrastructure market.

