Modern Treasury Joins Mastercard’s Crypto Partner Program
Modern Treasury has joined Mastercard’s Crypto Partner Program as an on-ramp and off-ramp provider, linking its payment infrastructure with Mastercard’s global network. The goal is to make it easier for businesses to move between fiat and digital assets at a larger scale.
The announcement matters because it shows how traditional payment infrastructure and crypto payment rails are becoming more tightly connected. This is less about retail trading and more about building the backend systems that let businesses move money across payment types, currencies, and borders.
What Modern Treasury is joining
Mastercard says its Crypto Partner Program brings together financial institutions, enterprises, and infrastructure providers to support secure onchain payments tied to global commerce.
By joining the program, Modern Treasury will work with Mastercard and other partners on fiat-to-crypto and crypto-to-fiat payment flows. In simple terms, it will help companies move money into and out of digital assets using more familiar payment and banking rails.
Why this matters for payments infrastructure
Modern Treasury’s role is not consumer-facing. It provides the systems businesses use to move money, reconcile transactions, manage ledgers, and handle reporting.
That makes this partnership important for a different reason: it is about the operational layer of crypto payments. If businesses want to use stablecoins or other digital assets in real payment workflows, they still need compliant banking connections, treasury controls, and clean movement between fiat and crypto. That is the part Modern Treasury is built to handle.
What Mastercard adds
Mastercard is contributing the global reach. The company says the program gives partners access to its payments infrastructure, including Mastercard Move Cross-Border Services, which it says reaches more than 95% of the world’s population.
That matters because crypto payments often struggle at the “last mile.” A token can move instantly onchain, but businesses still need a way to connect that value to banks, local rails, payment providers, and financial institutions.
What the companies are trying to build
Modern Treasury CEO Matt Marcus said the partnership is about redefining how money moves across currencies, geographies, and payment systems.
The larger idea is clear: digital asset payments will not scale just because blockchains exist. They also need reliable fiat bridges, commercial distribution, compliance workflows, and global acceptance infrastructure. This partnership is meant to help build those pieces.
Why it matters for crypto
- This is another sign that crypto payments are moving deeper into mainstream financial infrastructure.
- Modern Treasury’s role shows that on-ramp and off-ramp services are still one of the most important parts of real-world digital asset adoption.
- Mastercard is continuing to position itself as a bridge between traditional finance and onchain payments, rather than treating crypto as a separate silo.
- The partnership also reinforces the idea that stablecoins and digital assets are increasingly being built into enterprise payment workflows, not just exchange trading.
What to watch next
- Whether Modern Treasury launches specific products or integrations through the Crypto Partner Program.
- How deeply Mastercard Move and other Mastercard services are connected to Modern Treasury’s infrastructure over time.
- Which businesses adopt these new fiat-to-crypto and crypto-to-fiat flows first.
- Whether other treasury and payments platforms join the program as Mastercard expands its crypto infrastructure strategy.