- Injective will add native $USDC and Circle’s CCTP, enabling direct stablecoin transfers across supported blockchains without wrapped tokens.
- $USDC circulation is nearing $80 billion, giving Injective traders and developers a dollar-backed asset for settlement, collateral, and liquidity.
Injective is preparing to add native $USDC and Circle’s Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol, or CCTP, to its network, broadening the blockchain’s services for trading, payments, and decentralized finance. The integration will allow $USDC to move onto Injective as a native asset rather than through wrapped versions. It will also give users a direct way to transfer the stablecoin between the network and other supported blockchains.
$USDC is one of the largest dollar-backed stablecoins, with a market cap nearing $80 billion. The network handled trillions of dollars in on-chain transaction volume in 2025 as its use for payments, trading, and treasury activities surged.
$USDC and CCTP, powered by @circle, are officially coming to Injective.
The world's largest regulated stablecoin. Secure crosschain transfers. All natively integrated into the fastest blockchain built for finance.
Mainnet loading. ⏳ pic.twitter.com/WbQimtO7qF
— Injective ? (@injective) March 17, 2026
For Injective, $USDC will enhance spot and derivative products and asset tokenization by eliminating dependence on bridged tokens and enhancing capital flow across applications.
The CCTP protocol allows $USDC to move between blockchains through a burn-and-mint process. Instead of locking tokens in a bridge and issuing wrapped versions elsewhere, CCTP removes the original tokens on one chain and creates the same amount on the destination chain. This lowers the risks often associated with wrapped assets and third-party bridge systems.
Early this month, CNF reported that Injective introduced an AI-powered CLI skill that lets developers query chain data, send transactions, and manage keys directly from the terminal. The tool also standardizes wallet setup, network selection, and local client configuration across the mainnet and testnet for more consistent onchain workflows.
Native $USDC Brings Cross-Chain Access to Injective
Injective also plans to apply its MultiVM Token Standard to $USDC. That framework allows one canonical token to operate across both Wasm and EVM environments on the same network. As a result, developers using Solidity and those building in Wasm can access the same $USDC liquidity without fragmenting balances across different versions of the token.
The company has already made $USDC available on testnet, giving developers time to build and test products before mainnet support goes live. That includes payment tools, lending services, trading systems, and cross-chain transfer functions tied to CCTP.
The move is the latest in a long line of stablecoin integrations as these fiat-backed tokens find new applications beyond crypto trading, with payment giants such as Visa, Mastercard, and Stripe launching stablecoin-based services.
Previously, we covered Aon’s stablecoin insurance premium payment pilot with Coinbase and Paxos using PYUSD on Solana and $USDC on Ethereum. The test marked the first known insurance premium settlement in stablecoins by a major global broker.
In February, CNF reported that Polygon was powering instant VAT refunds in $USDC for international travelers at Italian airports during the 2026 Winter Olympics. The service launched at refund points in Milan, Rome, and Venice.