Mastercard secured a New York BitLicense to expand its stablecoin and tokenized payments strategy.
Mastercard received a BitLicense from the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) on May 27. The approval gives the payments company regulatory standing to operate with virtual currencies in New York State. Mastercard said the license supports its long-term strategy for stablecoins and tokenized deposits.
The NYDFS BitLicense program launched in 2015 and has issued roughly 40 licenses in total. Mastercard is one of three recipients in 2026, alongside GalaxyOne Prime and Zap Solutions. Any company that wants to serve New York users with virtual currency activity must hold either a BitLicense or a state banking charter.
The program is known for being difficult and expensive to complete. Some companies have formed separate legal entities just to operate within the state. Others have delayed market entry by years while working through the approval process. Mastercard, which processes approximately $9.5 trillion in annual payments, applied its existing compliance infrastructure toward meeting those requirements.
Stablecoin Strategy Expands
Mastercard announced plans to acquire stablecoin infrastructure firm BVNK for $1.8 billion in March 2026. The deal is aimed at enabling businesses to send, receive, convert, and store stablecoins across Mastercard's global network. The company has also launched crypto card products with MetaMask, Bybit, and Gemini and built end-to-end capabilities that let consumers spend stablecoins at merchant locations.
Earlier in 2026, SoFi Technologies partnered with Mastercard to settle its stablecoin over the firm's payments network. The company's stablecoin initiative now spans more than 100 partners, including Circle, Ripple, PayPal, and Paxos. The GENIUS Act, signed into law last year and establishing a federal framework for stablecoins, accelerated timelines across the payments industry.
The BitLicense adds New York State regulatory standing to Mastercard's digital asset position at a time when traditional financial companies are competing to establish roles in the stablecoin market.
