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  • Deel launched stablecoin salary payouts on Polygon for full-time employees on May 20, 2026, starting with eligible users in the US and Eurozone.
  • The rollout places crypto payroll inside HR software used by global employers, rather than inside crypto-native contractor products alone.
  • Competitors such as Toku, Rise, and Bitwage show payroll already has meaningful stablecoin usage, with volume, compliance, and off-ramp access becoming the main tests.

Deel launched stablecoin salary payouts for full-time employees on Polygon, starting with eligible customers in the US and Eurozone. Employees can choose a stablecoin allocation from net salary after taxes and deductions, while employers keep existing payroll workflows, funding options, and compliance processes inside Deel. The product operates inside a global HR platform with 40,000+ customers, service across 150+ countries, and more than $20 billion in processed global payroll.

Importantly, stablecoin pay now appears inside payroll, employment, tax, and HR records, where finance teams already manage salaries.

The launch arrives in a $322.9 billion stablecoin market:

  • DeFiLlama data shows USDT with 58.7% market share, while USDC remains the second-largest dollar stablecoin;
  • Visa has also expanded its stablecoin settlement pilot to nine blockchains and reported a $7 billion annualized settlement run rate in April 2026, up 50% from the prior quarter.

Payroll is a serious commercial test, where companies need stablecoin payouts to work alongside tax, labor law, KYC, sanctions checks, reporting, support, and reconciliation.

Payroll as a Harder Stablecoin Use Case

Contractor payouts gave stablecoin payroll its early market. Freelancers, DAO contributors, and Web3 teams often cared more about speed and dollar access than conventional employee benefits. Employers also faced fewer full-time employment obligations in many contractor workflows.

Employee payroll is a stricter environment. Salary payouts pass through gross-to-net calculations, statutory deductions, employer records, paid leave, benefits, local reporting, and worker support. A missed invoice can be escalated manually. A late salary creates legal, operational, and reputational exposure.

This is why Deel’s launch is important. The product keeps payroll workflows intact and places stablecoin choice after payroll calculations, where the worker receives part of net pay in a supported digital dollar. In product terms, stablecoins become an employee payout preference rather than a separate finance process.

Stablecoin Payroll to the HR Mainstream

Deel already markets fiat and crypto workforce tools to blockchain companies, including compliant payroll across 130+ countries and EOR service across 150+ countries. Its crypto page says employers can fund payroll through local bank accounts or crypto wallets and let workers receive funds in bank accounts or crypto wallets.

With 40,000+ customers, Deel brings stablecoin payroll to buyers already using a mainstream HR suite. Its advantage is distribution, rather than crypto-native depth. Deel can reach HR, legal, and finance teams inside companies already paying global employees through its software.

Deel also enters a field with real competitors:

  • Toku says it processes more than $1 billion in annual token payroll volume across 100+ countries and connects stablecoin payroll to ADP, Workday, UKG, and other payroll systems. 
  • Rise passed $1 billion in total payroll volume in November 2025, nine months after crossing $500 million. Mercury’s Rise case study says 53%+ of Rise users choose stablecoin payouts.
  • Bitwage has a longer operating history. The company says it launched the first beta version of its Bitcoin payroll product in July 2014. Its current site lists more than $400 million in payroll processed, 90,000+ registered workers, and 4,500+ registered companies.

Deel’s launch should be judged within an existing category. Deel expands access through HR distribution. Toku focuses on compliance connectivity with large payroll systems. Rise brings stablecoin-native payroll usage data. Bitwage brings a decade of crypto payroll history.

A Note on Polygon’s Role

Polygon was chosen by Deel for its place in the payroll story. Toku runs stablecoin payroll on Polygon and Visa added Polygon to its stablecoin settlement pilot in April 2026, alongside Arc, Base, Canton, and Tempo.

Payroll platforms and payment companies are choosing networks based on cost, settlement reliability, wallet support, stablecoin liquidity, and partner coverage. 

Off-Ramps as the Payroll Test

The strongest part of stablecoin payroll is also its hardest operational requirement. A salary can settle in minutes on-chain, but an employee still needs a usable wallet, a safe way to convert into local currency, and predictable tax treatment.

In countries with weak banking access or high inflation, holding dollars may be valuable. In mature payroll markets such as the US and Eurozone, the value proposition must compete with low-cost bank deposits, employment protections, and familiar payroll expectations.

Payroll teams judge new payout methods through failure scenarios:

  • Tax and wage-law treatment decide coverage;
  • KYC and sanctions workflows decide access;
  • Off-ramp liquidity decides worker value;
  • Support response decides trust when a transaction is delayed;
  • Fees decide whether a stablecoin payout feels like a cost benefit.

The crypto part moves value, but the payroll part makes the transfer acceptable to employers and usable to workers.

Deel’s Launch Deserves the Spotlight

Stablecoin payroll has left the whitepaper phase. It has measurable payroll volume through Rise and Toku, long-running market history through Bitwage, and new enterprise distribution through Deel. Payment giants such as Visa are testing stablecoin settlement in parallel, which gives the category more institutional reference points.

The strongest argument for stablecoin salaries is speed plus dollar access, especially across borders. However, stablecoin payroll has to match payroll reliability as well as crypto speed. A worker may value instant USDC, but still needs clear net salary records, local spending access, and support if a wallet or off-ramp problem appears.

Deel gives this discussion a mainstream software setting. Its rollout makes stablecoin payroll available through a platform finance and HR teams already know. 

Now, the focus turns to adoption by geography, average salary allocation, stablecoin choice, payout failures, off-ramp cost, and employer retention of the feature after the first few payroll cycles.

Until those numbers appear, strong claims about payroll transformation deserve caution. The launch is meaningful because it lets the market test stablecoin salaries inside normal HR operations.

The post Deel Brings Stablecoin Payroll Into Mainstream HR Software appeared first on BeInCrypto.

Projects,Editor’s Pick#Deel #Brings #Stablecoin #Payroll #Mainstream #Software1779708146

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