For everyone from freelance software developers in Lahore to domestic helpers in Manila, smartphones have become crypto banks. Instead of paying a day's wages in wire transfer fees, they can send and receive stablecoins at low cost and instantly.
This real demand explains why cryptocurrencies continue to thrive in Asia even as official attitudes remain cautious, even in countries with the toughest regulations like India. India imposes a 30% tax on crypto gains and deducts fees of up to 1% per transaction. According to data analytics firm Chainalysis, from mid-2024 to 2025, the scale of crypto fund inflows into India reached approximately $338 billion, ranking it first on the Global Crypto Adoption Index for the third consecutive year.
Nine of the top 20 countries on Chainalysis's Global Crypto Adoption Index are from Asia, including Pakistan (3rd), Vietnam, and developed economies like Japan and South Korea. Speculative trading remains popular, but the region's dominance mainly reflects a shift in the use of cryptocurrencies: it is no longer just a tool for speculation but has become a new type of financial infrastructure. "Cryptocurrency is solving real-world problems," says Chengyi Ong of Chainalysis.
Cross-border remittances are a core application. Southeast Asia has about 24 million migrant workers. World Bank data shows that in 2025, the average cost to send $200 was 6.5%. This is a heavy burden for migrant workers, especially in countries like the Philippines, where remittances account for 9% of GDP. Stablecoins are the solution; unlike Bitcoin, their price is hardly volatile. Ong says stablecoins are "becoming the backbone of crypto activity."
From January to July last year, the global volume of stablecoin transfers exceeded $4 trillion. Although this still represents a small share of the total annual cross-border payments, while highly volatile assets like Bitcoin grab global headlines, stablecoins are quietly taking on the role of real payments.
The advantages of stablecoins are also driving corporate adoption. In traditional cross-border payments, each participating bank adds fees, delays, markups, and compliance checks. A Vietnamese company paying a Thai supplier typically needs to go through a bank for currency exchange; stablecoin transactions settle faster with fewer intermediaries. According to crypto analytics firm Artemis, the monthly volume of inter-company stablecoin transactions soared from less than $100 million in early 2023 to over $6 billion by mid-2025.
Asia's vast freelance community is also bypassing traditional banks. The World Bank says the region has over 210 million gig economy workers, about half of the global total. Traditional payment systems often delay payments to drivers and delivery riders, while stablecoins enable instant settlement. Visa is testing a system that can send payments directly to users' stablecoin wallets. Pakistan has about 2 million freelancers and receives $38 billion in annual remittances. Many choose to receive payments in stablecoins and then convert them into local currency via exchanges or local merchants, with fees typically only 1%–3%, about half of traditional channels.
Whether stablecoins become legitimate financial infrastructure or a tool for fraud will largely depend on Asia. The very features that attract Filipino nurses for cross-border transfers (speed, low cost, no bank account needed) could also be exploited by criminal groups in Myanmar and Cambodia. Asia has the market size, real demand, and regulatory resolve to resolve this contradiction. If successful, stablecoins will reshape global capital flows; if they fail, cryptocurrencies will have found their long-awaited real-world use case, but an illegitimate one.





