Brazil’s Braza Expands BBRL Stablecoin to Polygon
picture: Polygon Labs blog
Grupo Braza, described by Polygon as Brazil’s largest foreign exchange bank, has expanded its Brazilian real-backed stablecoin BBRL to Polygon. Polygon says BBRL is fully backed by Brazilian reais, audited, and issued by an institution regulated by the Central Bank of Brazil.
The move adds another local-currency stablecoin to Polygon’s payments-focused network and signals deeper institutional use of onchain rails for real-world cross-border settlement, treasury, and regional payments.
Braza is bringing regulated BRL liquidity onto Polygon
Polygon says BBRL is now live on its network, giving users near-instant transfers and low fees while giving Grupo Braza a direct bridge between the Brazilian real and global onchain liquidity. The post frames the launch as a practical payments and settlement expansion, not just a trading-market listing.
Polygon also emphasizes the regulatory angle, saying BBRL is issued by a Central Bank of Brazil-regulated institution and is fully backed and audited. That positioning matters because local-currency stablecoins are increasingly being used in payment corridors and treasury flows where issuer trust and compliance are central.
Polygon is pitching itself as a rail for local-currency stablecoins
In the post, Polygon argues that while USD stablecoins still dominate crypto, local-currency stablecoins are reaching real scale and increasingly concentrating on Polygon. The company says Polygon accounted for 43% of non-USD stablecoin transfer activity across major blockchains at the end of 2025.
Polygon also says multiple local-currency stablecoins on the network — including AUD-, SGD-, COP-, and BRL-backed assets — have each crossed multi-billion-dollar lifetime transfer volumes. It describes Brazilian real stablecoins as one of the most active local-currency clusters onchain.
The post links that growth to real payment use cases, including supplier settlement, remittances, intra-regional commerce, and treasury rebalancing.
The core pitch is faster settlement without correspondent banking
Polygon uses the BBRL expansion to contrast legacy cross-border payments with onchain settlement. It argues that traditional correspondent banking still creates multi-day settlement, hidden FX spreads, banking-hour cutoffs, and limited visibility.
By contrast, Polygon says BBRL transfers on Polygon settle in seconds with predictable fees and final transaction state visible to both parties on the same ledger. The company also says it has upgraded core infrastructure for payments use cases, including throughput and finality improvements.
In plain terms, Polygon is framing BBRL as part of a programmable settlement model for BRL-denominated value moving across global rails.
BBRL plugs into Polygon’s “Open Money Stack” strategy
Polygon places the launch inside its broader “Open Money Stack” narrative — a still-developing, vertically integrated system that includes on/off-ramps, wallets, cross-chain orchestration, stablecoin interoperability, and compliance/identity layers.
The post says BBRL can now move through that stack: BRL can be originated from a bank account, tokenized into BBRL, settled wallet-to-wallet, converted into USD stablecoins, moved across chains, and later redeemed back to local fiat through regulated off-ramps. Polygon also highlights a key design goal: separating the sender’s currency from the recipient’s preferred currency.
That is a bigger claim than a single stablecoin listing — it is Polygon’s argument that local currencies can become interoperable, onchain payment primitives.
Brazil is being positioned as a major onchain payments hub
Polygon describes Brazil as one of Latin America’s largest and most sophisticated financial markets and says Braza’s move signals institutional conviction in production blockchain rails. The post adds that stablecoins across Latin America are already being used for real economic activity, not just speculation.
Polygon also uses the announcement to highlight recent network performance claims, including an 83% blockspace increase (gas limit from 60M to 110M), peak throughput above 2,600 TPS, 99.99% uptime, and more than $2.3 trillion in value moved. The company ties these upgrades directly to payments demand.
Why it matters for crypto
- This is a regulated local-currency stablecoin expansion tied to a major bank, not a crypto-native issuer launch.
- BRL stablecoin liquidity on Polygon strengthens the non-USD stablecoin trend in real payment corridors.
- The announcement reinforces the shift from stablecoins as trading tools to stablecoins as cross-border settlement infrastructure.
- Brazil’s inclusion adds weight to LATAM as a core region for onchain payments adoption.
- If BBRL usage grows, it could support more direct BRL-based treasury and remittance flows without USD intermediaries.
What to watch next
- Whether Grupo Braza discloses BBRL transaction volume or corridor-specific usage after the Polygon expansion.
- Additional BRL payment, remittance, or treasury partners integrating BBRL on Polygon.
- Whether Braza expands BBRL support into more wallets, exchanges, or merchant rails.
- New local-currency stablecoin launches on Polygon as the non-USD category grows.
- Independent confirmation of BBRL adoption and payment flow scale beyond the launch announcement.
Source: Polygon Labs blog