Polygon (MATIC) Details Open Money Stack Architecture for Enterprise Stablecoin Payments - Blockchain.News

Polygon (MATIC) Details Open Money Stack Architecture for Enterprise Stablecoin Payments

Alvin Lang Feb 27, 2026 20:45

Polygon (MATIC) Labs reveals technical breakdown of Open Money Stack, combining $2.3T settlement infrastructure with Coinme acquisition for end-to-end stablecoin rails.

Polygon (MATIC) Details Open Money Stack Architecture for Enterprise Stablecoin Payments

Polygon (MATIC) Labs has published a detailed technical breakdown of its Open Money Stack architecture, revealing how the platform combines blockchain settlement, wallet infrastructure, and regulated fiat access into a single API for enterprise stablecoin payments.

The announcement, dated February 27, 2026, comes roughly seven weeks after Polygon's January 8 launch of the Open Money Stack initiative. The company is now opening early access to enterprises evaluating production-grade stablecoin infrastructure.

What the Stack Actually Includes

The architecture addresses a pain point familiar to any payments team that's tried building stablecoin flows: vendor fragmentation. Most institutions currently stitch together separate compliance vendors, wallet providers, bridges, off-ramps, and chains. Works fine until something breaks, then you're debugging across three vendors and a dozen systems.

Polygon's approach stacks four integrated layers:

Settlement: Polygon Chain handles the base layer, processing transactions in under two seconds with fees averaging $0.002. The network has already moved over $2.3 trillion in stablecoin volume, with integrations from Revolut, Stripe, and Flutterwave. Recent upgrades pushed throughput up 83% to 2,600 TPS.

Wallets: Enterprise-grade smart contract wallets replace seed phrases with passkeys and social logins. The system supports both custodial and non-custodial options with role-based access controls.

Fiat Access: This is where the pending Coinme acquisition fits in. Subject to regulatory approval, Coinme brings money services licensing across 48 U.S. states, over 50,000 physical retail locations, and more than $1 billion processed. Without this piece, stablecoin payments stay disconnected from traditional banking rails.

Cross-Chain Orchestration: Agglayer and Trails handle routing across hundreds of chains behind the scenes. Trails is already live as a one-click cross-chain intents protocol.

The Economics Argument

Polygon's pitch centers on reducing operational surface area. Every integration seam between vendors adds maintenance burden and failure points. A vertically integrated stack means one integration point instead of four or five.

The flow works like this: funds enter through regulated fiat rails, settle into a smart contract wallet, get orchestrated across borders and networks as needed, finalize on Polygon in seconds, then off-ramp to local currency through compliant infrastructure.

Institutions can still pick and choose components. Want just the chain? Fine. Need the full stack? That's available too.

What Comes Next

Early access is now open for enterprises evaluating deployment. The Coinme acquisition remains pending regulatory approval, which will determine the timeline for full fiat rail integration in the U.S. market.

For payments teams tired of managing fragile vendor stacks, the real test will be whether Polygon can deliver on the "integrate once" promise when transaction volumes scale and edge cases multiply.

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