Lawson, one of Japan's largest convenience store chains, is preparing to test Japanese yen stablecoin payments in August, with payment technology provider Netstars rolling out a multi-stablec
Lawson, one of Japan's largest convenience store chains, is preparing to test Japanese yen stablecoin payments in August, with payment technology provider Netstars rolling out a multi-stablecoin merchant services platform to support the pilot.
The pilot, first disclosed through a PR Times announcement, positions Lawson as an early mover among mainstream Japanese retailers exploring stablecoin-based checkout. Netstars, which provides payment processing infrastructure to merchants across Japan, is the technical enabler behind the initiative. For related coverage, see BitFuFu Sells 184 BTC, Holdings Fall to 1,671 BTC.
The test is explicitly a pilot, not a full nationwide deployment. Details on which Lawson locations will participate, the number of stores involved, and the exact consumer payment flow have not yet been confirmed publicly. For related coverage, see Gate Launches Second Phase of Pre-IPOs Featuring OpenAI, USDT and GUSD.
Netstars' multi-stablecoin merchant layer
Netstars announced in June 2026 that it had signed a memorandum of understanding with Allscale to advance stablecoin payments in Japan. The partnership laid groundwork for a merchant acceptance stack that supports multiple stablecoins rather than locking retailers into a single token. For related coverage, see Bitcoin Spot ETFs End 8-Week Outflow Streak With $197M Inflows.
Multi-stablecoin support matters operationally because it allows merchants to accept payments denominated in different stablecoins, including yen-pegged tokens, without needing separate integrations for each. For a retailer like Lawson with thousands of locations, a unified processing layer reduces complexity at the point of sale.
This approach differs from earlier crypto payment experiments in Japan, which typically supported only one token or required customers to convert assets before paying. A multi-stablecoin merchant service shifts that burden from the consumer to the payment infrastructure provider.
Why Lawson matters as a test case
Lawson operates over 14,000 convenience stores across Japan. Convenience stores in the country function as essential daily infrastructure, handling everything from food purchases to bill payments and parcel pickups.
A stablecoin payment pilot at Lawson carries different weight than a similar test at a crypto-native merchant or online platform. If yen stablecoin payments work at a konbini checkout counter, it demonstrates viability in one of the highest-frequency, lowest-friction retail environments in the world.
The choice of a yen-denominated stablecoin is also significant. Unlike dollar-pegged stablecoins such as USDC or USDT, a yen stablecoin removes foreign exchange risk for both the merchant and the consumer. Customers pay in a unit they already think in, and Lawson receives settlement in yen terms.
Japan's growing institutional interest in blockchain infrastructure has been building through multiple channels, from the Solana Foundation's recent acquisition of a stake in SBI R3 Japan to regulatory developments around digital assets.
The pilot also arrives as stablecoin regulation in other Asian markets faces scrutiny, with Thailand's central bank reviewing high-value USDT transactions as part of its anti-money laundering push. Japan has taken a comparatively structured approach to stablecoin regulation under its revised Payment Services Act.
What remains unclear before August
Several critical details about the Lawson pilot remain unconfirmed. The specific stablecoins that will be accepted at launch have not been publicly listed, though reporting from The Block has linked the pilot to JPYC, a yen-pegged stablecoin.
The geographic scope of the test is also unknown. Whether Lawson will run the pilot in a handful of Tokyo locations or across a broader region will significantly affect how much real-world data the test produces.
Consumer-facing mechanics, such as whether customers will pay via a mobile wallet, QR code scan, or NFC tap, have not been detailed. The user experience at checkout will likely determine whether stablecoin payments can compete with Japan's existing electronic payment options like PayPay and Suica.
Settlement timing and currency conversion processes on the merchant side also remain to be clarified. Whether Lawson receives immediate yen settlement or holds stablecoin balances temporarily could affect the model's appeal to other retailers watching the pilot's results.
FAQ
What is Lawson testing in August?
Lawson is piloting Japanese yen stablecoin payments at select store locations, allowing customers to pay for purchases using yen-denominated stablecoins through Netstars' payment infrastructure.
What does Netstars' multi-stablecoin merchant service do?
It provides a unified payment processing layer that lets merchants accept multiple stablecoins through a single integration, rather than requiring separate setups for each token.
Is this a full rollout?
No. This is a pilot test. The number of participating stores, geographic scope, and duration have not been publicly confirmed.
Why does this matter for stablecoin payments in Japan?
Lawson is a mainstream convenience store chain with over 14,000 locations. A successful pilot at this scale of retailer would demonstrate that stablecoin payments can work in high-volume, everyday retail settings, not just crypto-native environments.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
The post Lawson to Test Yen Stablecoin Payments in August With Netstars was initially published on Coincu.