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Cross-border settlements drag for days, reconciliation eats into margins, and every new market entry comes with a tangle of banking relationships and compliance overhead. Meanwhile, your users expect instant payments, your treasury team demands transparency, and your CFO is tired of watching capital sit idle in transit. [[widget crypto=(USDC)]]
You’ve seen how stablecoins solve these issues for crypto-natives. But launching your own stablecoins seems like a regulatory and technical nightmare. Yet, many companies, like PayPal, are going the extra mile to launch their own stablecoins. Fortunately, there’s a solution that even smaller enterprises can use.
Enter Stablecoin-as-a-Service (SCaaS). This is an enterprise-grade infrastructure model that lets you issue, manage, and integrate stablecoins without the complexity of building from zero.
Stablecoin-as-a-Service (SCaaS) is a turnkey infrastructure model that allows businesses, banks, and fintechs to issue, manage, and use stablecoins without building or maintaining the technology, compliance, and custody layers themselves.
With SCaaS, businesses can move value globally in real time, reduce settlement risk, and create new revenue models. All while keeping the trust and compliance backbone intact.
[[related text=(7 Reasons Stablecoins Are Becoming the Currency of Regulated Businesses) link=(https://transak.com/blog/7-reasons-stablecoins-are-becoming-the-currency-of-regulated-businesses)]]
In simple terms, it’s the “AWS for stablecoins.”
Instead of spending years setting up infrastructure, a company can plug into a SCaaS provider that handles everything (from minting and redemption to compliance and fiat backing).
When companies use stablecoins in their operations, money itself becomes programmable. This can give companies the much needed moat in their operations. Companies/enterprises can:
A SCaaS provider typically offers:
A fintech launching cross-border remittances could partner with a SCaaS provider like BitGo or Stably to issue a USD-backed stablecoin for its ecosystem. The fintech company focuses on product and users, while the SCaaS partner handles blockchain deployment, reserves, and compliance.
Here are the key factors a business should evaluate before choosing a Stablecoin-as-a-Service (SCaaS) provider.
Don’t be the one to buy into hype and then face a regulatory headache later. The provider you choose must have clear licences or registrations (money transmitter licence, VASP registration, etc.), well-defined KYC/AML workflows and the ability to operate in the jurisdictions you care about. If they’re patchy here, you may launch fast but pay the price later.
Ask, “are the token contracts audited?” “Are there multi-sig controls, upgrade mechanisms and clear governance?” You’re running money infrastructure., and code flaws or weak operational controls here are existential.
The provider should offer enterprise-grade APIs, SDKs, dashboards and the flexibility to brand the coin (symbol, token name), choose chains, choose issuance/redemption flows.
Your stablecoin might be great internally, but if users or vendors can’t move in or out of fiat, you’re bottlenecked. You’ll want partner support for converting fiat ↔ token, and connections to wallets or exchanges for liquidity. For example, if you integrate Transak to manage fiat-crypto rails, that can simplify life.
Businesses will find themselves at a competitive advantage when they join hands with a suitable stablecoin service provider.
Building your own stablecoin infrastructure can take months. With SCaaS, you can go live in weeks, skipping the technical and regulatory maze. Your stablecoin service partner will handle the heavy lifting so your team can focus on product and growth.
Maintaining licenses, KYC, AML, and reporting workflows across multiple regions is costly. SCaaS providers absorb much of that burden through their existing regulatory coverage and APIs. You get enterprise-grade compliance out of the box, without building it yourself.
Stablecoins enable borderless transfers and real-time settlement. With SCaaS, your business can send, receive, or redeem value anywhere and anytime without relying on banking hours or slow correspondent networks.
You can launch your own branded stablecoin, fully backed and compliant. This builds customer trust and keeps liquidity and transaction fees circulating within your ecosystem.
Stablecoins issued through SCaaS can move capital between subsidiaries or markets instantly. Even when the cash sits idle, it can earn interest. Tether, for instance, made over $10 billion in 2025 just through interest payments.
With SCaaS, you can automate payments, settlements, and even revenue sharing through programmable smart contracts. That means fewer intermediaries, faster reconciliation, and lower back-office costs.
By issuing or integrating your own stablecoin, you gain direct control over money movement, rather than relying on banks or external payment processors. This can translate into stronger margins and less friction during peak transaction periods.
Stablecoin frameworks are increasingly aligning with upcoming regulations like the U.S. GENIUS Act and MiCA in the EU. Choosing a compliant SCaaS provider positions your business to adapt smoothly to the digital currency era, including interoperability with CBDCs.
When businesses explore stablecoin-as-a-service, one of the biggest friction points is fiat connectivity, i.e., getting money in and out of the blockchain reliably, compliantly, and at scale. That’s where Transak plays a critical role.
Transak provides the licensed fiat–to–crypto and crypto–to–fiat rails that power many stablecoin ecosystems today. With support for multiple payment methods, including Apple Pay, Google Pay, credit/debit cards, and local bank transfers, Transak bridges the last mile between traditional finance and blockchain settlement.
For businesses building atop a SCaaS platform, Transak can:
In practice, this means a fintech, exchange, or digital marketplace could issue a stablecoin through a SCaaS provider and plug Transak in as the fiat gateway from card to stablecoin and back.