Key Takeaways:
- Circle Foundation is also investing in the UN Digital Hub of Treasury Solutions to digitize assistance payment through blockchain and stablecoins.
- More than $38B in humanitarian funds still move through slow legacy systems; pilots show digital rails can cut costs by up to 20%.
- Regulated stablecoins like USDC enable faster cross-border transfers, full traceability, and real-time transparency for global aid.
Circle is pushing the deeper integration of crypto to transaction activities in the real world. This time, the focus is humanitarian aid. Announced in Davos, this partnership shows that stablecoin is gradually moving beyond the role of transaction/trading tool, to become a part of critical global infrastructure.
Read More: Coinbase, Circle Take Bermuda Onchain as Nation Moves Toward First Fully Digital Economy
Circle’s Grant Targets the UN’s Financial Bottlenecks
Circle Foundation has awarded its first international grant to support the United Nations’ Digital Hub of Treasury Solutions (DHoTS), a shared platform designed to overhaul how money moves across UN agencies.
The global humanitarian system processes more than $38 billion every year, yet much of that capital still flows through correspondent banking networks built decades ago. These rails are slow, costly and opaque particularly in crisis areas where time and responsibility count the most.
The investment of Circle will help DhoTS integrate its new generation financial infrastructure, including managed stablecoin, in order to simplize cross-border transaction, reduce operational friction and increase the transperancy for the whole UN’s ecosystem.
The announcement came at the Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, where the”crypto-native” tools is becoming more importatnt in official policy discussions globally.
Circle Foundation is supporting the United Nations in their efforts to modernize global aid delivery.
The humanitarian system moves more than $38B every year, yet much of that aid still relies on slow, costly legacy financial rails.
Through its first international grant, Circle… pic.twitter.com/JwWXdmh55F
— Circle (@circle) January 21, 2026
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How Stablecoins Change Aid Delivery
The heart of the initiative is to use blockchain-based-payment-rails which are able to transfer value instantly across borders, without involving a variety of middlemen.
Conventional humanitarian transfers are usually characterized by levels of correspondent banks, manual reconciliation and slow settlement. Every step is a cost and visibility killer. Stablecoins condense the whole process into one traceable transaction.
UNHCR’s Blockchain Pilots Set the Foundation
The grant is based on previous work done by the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), which has been testing blockchain-based assistance since 2022.
In the case of the crisis in Ukraine displacement, UNHCR distributed USDC-based payouts to people who were recipients. Those pilots showed that digital resources could be made responsible and secure as well as on a large scale in the real conditions of humanitarian interventions.
The outcomes revealed that delivery time was quicker, there was greater responsibility, and it was less expensive than using the traditional banking channels. That experience serves in direct feed into DHoTS, which tries to standardize such capabilities into several UN agencies.
DHoTS has so far been deployed to 15 UN agencies, such as UNDP, IOM, WMO, OECD, and ICAO, with technical assistance from the UN International Computing Centre.
Regulated Stablecoins, Not Experimental Crypto
One of the major ones underlined by officials of the Circle and UN is regulation. This program is not based on unstable and unregulated tokens. Rather, it is aimed at controlled stable coins with in-built compliance, risk management, and auditing.
Circle believes that with financial protections built into its stabilized coins, it could satisfy the high demands of large institutions in the population and at the same time achieve the speed and efficiency associated with crypto.
This distinction matters. Regulated stablecoins are slowly being considered by governments and multilateral organizations as a reasonable increment to current payment infrastructure, and not a hypothetical experiment.
Transparency Becomes a Default Feature
Visibility is one of the largest structural problems in global aid. Donors would like to see evidence that money is going to the right people whereas the agencies would like to have more resources to trace the flows across jurisdictions.
Systems based on blockchain transform that dynamic. The records are maintained in an unalterable manner which establishes a common source of truth among agencies, partners and auditors.
This would reduce reconciliation gaps, streamline reporting and enhance accountability at scale to the benefit of the UN. In the case of donors, it translates to a better understanding of the way every dollar is spent.