MassPay, a global payout orchestration platform for cross-border payments, recently announced a significant expansion of its fiat funding currency support – bringing the total number of supported fiat funding currencies to more than 35. Businesses across every major region can now fund their payout accounts in local currency and disburse worldwide from that same balance, in addition to MassPay’s existing support for stablecoin and cryptocurrency.
Where MassPay previously supported primary global currencies — including US dollars (USD), euros (EUR), Canadian dollars (CAD), British pounds (GBP), and Australian dollars (AUD) — the platform now accepts a broader range of fiat currencies spanning markets in Asia, Latin America, Europe, the Middle East, and beyond. For businesses in these markets, payout programmes can now be funded locally, with greater efficiency and lower overall cost. This closes a long-standing gap for organisations that don’t operate primarily in dollars or euros, giving them the same funding flexibility USD- and EUR-based clients have long enjoyed.
“Our clients operate globally, and their payment infrastructure should operate globally too. Businesses increasingly want to fund and send payouts in the currencies they actually operate in – without unnecessary USD routing, multiple conversion steps, or added operational overhead. This expansion gives clients more flexibility to manage global payouts directly in local currency,” said Ran Grushkowsky, CEO of MassPay.
MassPay’s payout infrastructure supports direct cross-currency disbursements throughout the flow, including single-step FX conversions between local currencies and like-for-like payouts with no FX at all. Examples include funding in Singapore dollars (SGD) and disbursing in Brazilian reais (BRL). Users can also hold euros (EUR) while paying recipients in Japanese yen (JPY).
The infrastructure also enables funding and disbursing in the same local currency without any FX conversion step. The result is a more efficient payout operation: fewer friction points, broader currency optionality, and tighter alignment between how a business holds money and how it pays the people and partners that keep it running.
