Circle Launches USDC Bridge for Native Transfers

Circle logo in white on a dark blue background with a thin vertical purple line.

Circle has launched USDC Bridge, its own interface for moving USDC natively across supported blockchains. The tool runs on Circle’s Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol, which burns USDC on the source chain and mints native USDC on the destination chain.

The launch adds a user-facing product layer to CCTP, which has mostly served as developer infrastructure. Instead of relying on wrapped tokens, liquidity pools or a third-party bridge interface, users can move Circle-issued USDC between chains through a Circle-operated front end.

The Bridge Simplifies Cross-Chain USDC Transfers

USDC Bridge is meant to make cross-chain transfers easier to follow for everyday users. Circle said the interface handles gas requirements in the background, shows fees upfront and provides live transfer status.

The main change is the user-facing interface. CCTP already powered native USDC movement for wallets, exchanges, DeFi apps and bridge providers. USDC Bridge brings the same burn-and-mint process into a simpler app experience for users who just want to move stablecoins from one chain to another.

CCTP Remains the Infrastructure Layer

Circle says CCTP enables 1:1 USDC transfers without traditional bridge liquidity pools or wrapped tokens. The process starts with a burn on the source chain, followed by a Circle attestation and then a mint on the destination chain.

The protocol supports more chains than the new bridge interface. Circle’s CCTP docs list support across more than 20 blockchains, while the new bridge interface currently supports transfers across a smaller set of chains, including Ethereum, Avalanche, Arbitrum, Base, Monad, Optimism, Polygon, Sonic and World Chain.

Circle is Building Around Cross-Chain USDC

The bridge fits into Circle’s wider interoperability push. In an April 10 blog post, the company said CCTP had processed more than $140 billion in cumulative USDC transfer volume since launching in April 2023 and had become core infrastructure for cross-chain stablecoin movement.

The launch adds a consumer-facing layer to Circle’s broader cross-chain USDC strategy. For users, the main benefit is simpler cross-chain transfers of native USDC without wrapped versions or extra bridge steps.

Categories:

Fhumulani Lukoto Cryptocurrency Journalist

Fhumulani Lukoto holds a Bachelors Degree in Journalism enabling her to become the writer she is today. Her passion for cryptocurrency and bitcoin started in 2021 when she began producing content in the space. A naturally inquisitive person, she dove head first into all things crypto to gain the huge wealth of knowledge she has today. Based out of Gauteng, South Africa, Fhumulani is a core member of the content team at Coin Insider.

View all posts by Fhumulani Lukoto >