Western Union (WU +0.38%) is known for being the money transfer service that helped wire the American West in the 19th century. Now, it wants to wire the world's money with a digital dollar. That's why it's planning to launch a new stablecoin on Solana (SOL 2.17%) called U.S. Dollar Payment Token (USDPT) in 2026.
If successful, this new arrangement could be significant for both parties. Here's what you need to know.
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Stablecoins meet remittances
Western Union's plan is to issue a stablecoin on Solana, integrate it across the company's vast money transfer network, and then use the chain to move value quickly and cheaply around the world at industrial scale. That means it will be a business-reshaping transition for Western Union, and a major new user for Solana. Since Solana's strengths are in its rock-bottom fees, snappy transaction times, and high throughput, it's an ideal choice to accomplish the company's goals.
Solana's base fee is roughly 0.000005 SOL, the blockchain's native coin. That usually works out to be a fraction of a cent per transaction, with the ability to pay optional priority fees for when speed is essential and the network is busier than usual. With other major payment players already testing stablecoin settlement on Solana, there is thus a growing operational playbook for processing such flows on the chain. Regarding settlement times, most transfers are closed and finalized in just a few seconds, no matter how far the funds need to travel or to what wallet address.

CRYPTO: SOL
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The advantage Western Union gains by using Solana is thus quite significant.
Standard global remittance fees still average about 6.5% of the transfer amount. What's more, international transfers often take a few days to settle, which is a long time for cash to be in limbo. By closing transactions faster and by incurring lower fees than previously, Western Union will be able to recoup a significant amount of working capital. It will be similarly advantageous for its customers, as they may be able to realize much lower prices and much faster transfers.
What it means for investors
Scale is Western Union's ace card. The company has hundreds of thousands of agent locations and a global footprint spanning more than 150 countries. If even a modest slice of its flows migrate to its stablecoin by the end of 2026, Solana could see a durable and large increase in on-chain stablecoin transfers and account activity.
For Solana holders, onboarding Western Union to the network is going to be a lot more than a one-day pop for the coin's price. The company reported that for its 2024 fiscal year, it processed $102.9 billion in principal for its customers performing cross-border transfers. It's possible that during the next few years, 100% of that volume will be transitioned to being processed over Solana.

NYSE: WU
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The chain thus now has an opportunity to begin entrenching itself as a default for high-frequency, low-value transfers. In practice, that can start to compound its existing network effects, encourage more merchant and wallet integrations, and probably lift long-term demand for the coin, bolstering prices along the way.
For Western Union shareholders, the upside is twofold. First, the company could reduce its own costs while still charging a competitive retail fee, boosting unit economics. Second, a native stablecoin gives the business more control over treasury, liquidity, and cross-border interoperability with digital wallets, which supports new products. Management has already flagged its digital segment as a growth lever.
The takeaway is that this partnership is a real vote of confidence in Solana's capacity for everyday payments. It's also a credible modernization path for Western Union, so it's bullish for both assets, but especially for Solana. If you already own Solana, this strengthens the investment thesis for a long-term hold. It might even be worth buying a bit more, to squeeze out some more upside from the chain picking up a major new client.