Meta stablecoin creator payouts are now becoming a real product rather than a long-rumored comeback attempt. Meta has started offering select creators the option to receive payouts in Circle’s USDC, marking a new crypto push years after the company abandoned Libra and Diem under regulatory pressure.
Meta is starting with a limited creator rollout

According to CoinDesk, the feature is currently available to a limited group of creators in Colombia and the Philippines. Eligible users can connect a crypto wallet and receive payouts in USDC on either Solana or Polygon, with Stripe supporting the reporting layer around the transactions.
That rollout is small for now, but the signal is much bigger than the geography. Meta is once again testing blockchain-based payments at scale, this time through third-party infrastructure instead of trying to build its own token from scratch.
Why this matters after Libra and Diem

Meta’s earlier crypto ambitions collapsed under intense scrutiny, but the new strategy is far more pragmatic. Instead of introducing a new global token, the company is plugging into an existing dollar-backed stablecoin and using Stripe as a trusted payments partner.
That shift lowers political risk while still giving Meta a way to test whether stablecoins can improve creator payments, especially in markets where cross-border payouts are slow, expensive, or heavily dependent on traditional banking rails.
Stablecoins are moving deeper into everyday platforms
With more than 3 billion users across Facebook and Instagram, Meta is one of the largest tech companies to experiment with stablecoins for real-world consumer payouts. That makes this more than a crypto side note. It is another sign that stablecoins are gradually moving from trading infrastructure into mainstream platform economics.
If the pilot expands, Meta could become one of the most visible examples of how blockchain-based payments reach ordinary users without asking them to care about blockchain itself.
Source: CoinDesk







