Confirmo launched Subscribe on July 14, 2026, the first stablecoin subscription product that supports both exchange accounts and self-custody wallets in a single integration. Enterprises can now bill customers in stablecoins on a recurring basis without building that payment infrastructure themselves.
Key Takeaways
- Subscribe, per Confirmo, isolates each subscription in its own smart contract with a scoped approval, so no single subscription can ever pull more than its agreed amount.
- Subscribe accepts 700-plus wallets through WalletConnect alongside exchange accounts and runs on the Solana and Polygon blockchains.
- Subscribe launches with USDC, issued through regulated entities of Circle Internet Group, and USDG, issued by Paxos.
- Global stablecoin payments reached an estimated $350 to $550 billion in 2025, up 55% year over year.
- FTMO, a proprietary trading firm, served as Confirmo’s design partner for a launch aimed at SaaS providers and AI companies.
Confirmo Debuts Subscribe for Recurring Stablecoin Billing
The subscription economy is on track to reach $1.2 trillion by 2030, and 78% of adults worldwide now rely on at least one active subscription. Most stablecoin payment tools still serve only one side of that market, wallet-native customers or exchange-account customers, rarely both from a single integration. Confirmo built Subscribe to close that gap.
Confirmo announced the launch in an official blog post, framing Subscribe as built for both exchange-account customers and the same self-custody holders described above.
Today we’re launching Confirmo Subscribe: automated stablecoin subscriptions for enterprise merchants.
β Confirmo (@ConfirmoPay) July 14, 2026
Subscribe is a direct response to what our customers have been asking for, designed in partnership with our long-time client @FTMO_com. We built the first stablecoin⦠pic.twitter.com/XSNF6lOvxk
The OnChain Consent Fix
Recurring onchain billing has traditionally forced a tradeoff between a customer approving every charge manually or granting one broad approval and trusting the merchant not to pull more than agreed. Subscribe removes that choice. A customer approves once, payments pull automatically on each billing date, and any single subscription can be cancelled onchain without affecting the others.
That per subscription cap and onchain cancellation directly answer a common complaint about card-based recurring billing. A customer often cannot see, cap, or cleanly exit a card-style pull payment before the next charge lands. Confirmo’s contract level cap makes that spending limit enforceable code rather than a merchant’s promise, the same kind of wallet-permission design exchanges are being pushed toward more broadly.
Failed card payments account for 50% of all subscription churn, Confirmo said, because declines, expired cards, fraud blocks, and currency conversion issues cause involuntary churn that is hard to attribute and recover. A wallet-based pull payment does not expire or decline for currency conversion reasons, so that specific failure mode disappears.
Anna Kratky Strebl, Confirmo Group CEO, said in the announcement:
Why the Stablecoin Choice Matters?
Subscribe’s settlement layer, Circle-issued USDC and Paxos-issued USDG, is not incidental. Both settlement assets come from named, regulated issuers rather than an offshore or algorithmic token, a compliance choice as much as a technical one. That lines up with a stablecoin regulation shift toward issuer identity as the real compliance test.
That framing matters for enterprises already navigating CFTC Crypto Regulations, where the compliance question is shifting from whether a business accepts stablecoins to which stablecoins it can route revenue through at all.
CoinLaw’s Takeaway
Subscribe’s real innovation sits in the approval model Confirmo built, not the payment rail itself. Card networks already move money globally. What they cannot give a merchant is a hard cap on one recurring charge or a clean exit from a single subscription.
Pairing that cap with regulated issuer stablecoins signals a product built to survive a compliance conversation, not just a demo.
The stablecoin subscription category was always going to reward whichever design solved the negative option problem card networks never fixed. Adoption at scale still depends on ordinary friction. Enterprises need a reason to route recurring revenue through code they do not operate day to day, and end customers still need a compatible wallet or exchange account before any of this reaches them.