Visa said Wednesday it will join Canton Network as the first major global payments company to serve as a Super Validator, deepening its push into blockchain infrastructure aimed at banks and other regulated financial institutions.
The role gives Visa a direct hand in validating activity and helping govern the network, which is designed to let institutions use shared blockchain rails without exposing sensitive transaction data.
The move targets one of the main reasons large financial firms have been cautious about public blockchain adoption. While open networks offer transparency and interoperability, that same visibility can clash with privacy, compliance, and operational requirements in traditional finance. Canton positions itself as an answer to that problem by allowing institutions to transact on a public network while keeping confidential business data shielded.
Visa said it plans to bring the same operational standards it uses across its global payments business to Canton’s validation layer. The company framed the partnership as a way for banks and financial firms to test and scale stablecoin payments, settlement, and treasury use cases without having to rebuild their existing risk and compliance frameworks.
The announcement also adds another piece to Visa’s broader digital asset strategy. In the release, the company said its stablecoin settlement efforts have reached an annualized run rate of $4.6 billion globally and that it now supports more than 130 stablecoin-linked card programs across more than 50 countries.
Visa also launched a dedicated Stablecoins Advisory Practice in December 2025 to help banks and fintechs assess how blockchain-based payment rails fit into their businesses.
For Canton, Visa’s entry brings a major payments brand into a network that has been gaining traction across tokenized finance and institutional blockchain infrastructure. Canton recently said its ecosystem had grown to more than 50 Super Validator nodes and over 700 validators overall, underscoring its effort to position itself as a production-ready network for capital markets and payments rather than an experimental crypto venue.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Estefano Gomez. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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