Arbitrum has crossed $7.8 billion in stablecoins, strengthening its position as one of Ethereum’s largest Layer 2 settlement networks for dollar-linked crypto activity. The network also proce
Arbitrum has crossed $7.8 billion in stablecoins, strengthening its position as one of Ethereum’s largest Layer 2 settlement networks for dollar-linked crypto activity.
The network also processed more than $74 billion in stablecoin transfer volume over the last 30 days, showing that liquidity is not only sitting onchain but actively moving through payments, DeFi markets, trading flows and treasury activity.
The milestone puts Arbitrum deeper into the center of the stablecoin economy. Stablecoins remain the main working capital layer in crypto, powering exchange settlement, lending markets, liquidity pools, tokenized asset transactions and cross-border transfers.
USDC Remains Central To Arbitrum Activity
USDC remains one of the most important assets on Arbitrum, giving the network deep dollar liquidity for applications that need fast settlement and lower transaction costs than Ethereum mainnet.
That liquidity base is becoming more useful as stablecoins move beyond crypto-native trading. Cash App recently opened USDC transfers across Solana, Ethereum, Polygon and Arbitrum, giving mainstream users a direct route into stablecoin transfers across major blockchain networks.
Arbitrum’s stablecoin growth also supports the wider DeFi stack. Lending markets, perpetuals platforms, automated market makers and yield products all depend on deep stablecoin liquidity because users need a reliable settlement asset when entering, exiting or hedging positions.
Stablecoins Become Layer 2 Working Capital
The latest figures show how Layer 2 networks are competing less on transaction counts alone and more on real capital movement. Stablecoin supply measures how much value is available on the network, while transfer volume shows whether that value is being used.
That distinction is increasingly important as stablecoins become a core settlement rail for payments, tokenized assets and institutional crypto products. A reported Stripe, Visa, Mastercard and Coinbase stablecoin consortium shows how payment firms are moving deeper into blockchain-based settlement, while networks such as Arbitrum compete to host liquidity at scale.
The same trend is visible in tokenized real-world assets. Stablecoins provide the base liquidity that allows tokenized funds, treasuries, commodities and private-market products to trade and settle more efficiently. The broader tokenized RWA market has already crossed $31 billion, and stablecoins remain the main cash layer around that growth.
Arbitrum’s Next Test Is Sustained Usage
Arbitrum’s stablecoin base gives the network a strong foundation, but the next test is whether transfer activity stays elevated beyond short-term market cycles.
Stablecoin flows can rise during volatility, bridging campaigns, DeFi incentives or institutional rebalancing. Durable growth depends on whether users keep returning to Arbitrum for payments, trading, lending, tokenized assets and app-level liquidity.
For now, the numbers give Arbitrum a clear market signal. More than $7.8 billion in stablecoins and over $74 billion in 30-day transfer volume place the network among the most active Layer 2 environments for dollar-denominated onchain finance.
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