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Stablecoin checkout for online stores with global buyers

Let online shoppers pay with USDC, USDT, or EURC through a hosted checkout or API flow that connects each payment back to the order.

Picture a shopper who has already decided to buy, but their card is expensive, unavailable, or not the way they prefer to pay. Taria Pay gives that shopper a stablecoin option without asking the store to become a crypto product. The payment feels direct to the buyer, while the order still lands in a shape the business can understand.

A new payment option for the buyer who is already ready

Stablecoin checkout is most useful when it solves a real purchase problem. A store does not need to rebuild every payment path. It can add a wallet-friendly option where card fees, cross-border friction, or payment declines already create lost orders.

The best first launch is specific enough to measure: one region, one product line, one digital catalog, or one segment of buyers who already hold USDC, USDT, or EURC.

How Taria Pay keeps checkout familiar

Taria Pay sits between the checkout and the wallet payment. The customer sees the amount, token, and network clearly. The store receives a payment result it can connect to the order, fulfillment step, or customer record.

That means stablecoin payment does not have to become a separate workflow. It can become another way a real order gets paid.

  • Hosted checkout gives the buyer a focused place to complete the wallet payment.
  • Payment status updates let the store recognize paid, expired, and incomplete orders.
  • The buyer returns to a confirmation path that keeps the purchase moving.

Example: a global digital-goods store

A digital-goods seller with customers in several countries starts by offering stablecoin checkout on annual plans and larger carts. Buyers who already hold USDC or USDT can pay directly, while everyone else keeps the existing card flow.

After the first month, the store compares completed purchases, payment costs, and order exceptions. If the flow stays clear for buyers, the same checkout path can be promoted to more products.

FAQ

Where should an online store offer stablecoin checkout first?

Start where the payment problem is visible: cross-border buyers, higher-value carts, digital goods, or customers who already ask to pay from a wallet. Keep card checkout available while the new option proves itself.

What does the buyer experience look like?

A shopper chooses stablecoin at checkout, sees the supported token and network, pays from a wallet, and returns to a clear order confirmation. The store receives payment status updates that can be tied back to the order.

Should we use hosted checkout or the API?

Use hosted checkout when you want a faster launch with less custom UI. Use the API when the payment step needs to sit inside a checkout or product flow you already control.

Guides for adding stablecoin checkout

Use these guides to choose the first buyer flow, compare supported tokens, and connect payments to orders.

ProviderFeeGlobal
Taria Pay0.5%Yes
Cards2.9%Mixed
WalletsVariesMixed
Platform comparisonsComparisonCheckout

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