Educational material; for payroll implementation and tax decisions, involve an accountant/lawyer in your jurisdiction.
In 2026, stablecoins have become a practical rail for cross-border payouts, so “crypto salaries” are back on the agenda. With stricter bank checks, costly international transfers, and the constant “make it before the cut-off” routine, more businesses are looking at USDT/USDC as a settlement tool.
Below are the models that actually get used in 2026, where the risks hide, and how to set things up so payouts don’t turn into a weekly quest.
The most common setup: the contractor issues an invoice, the company pays in USDT/USDC, and the contractor decides what to do next (hold, convert, cash out).
What to define in the contract/policy upfront:
This is a practical workaround where labor law is strict: base salary stays in fiat, while a variable component can be paid in stablecoins by agreement.
The company holds a payout reserve in stablecoins and sends scheduled batches. That reduces operational stress: no last-minute buying, no scrambling for liquidity, and fewer “random-looking” bank movements.
Valuation for reporting
If you pay in USDT/USDC, accounting typically needs a fiat value on a specific date/time with a clear price source—plus proof of the transfer.
Payroll in crypto and taxation
In the US, for example, the IRS treats virtual currency as property; payments for services and wages are treated as income, and employers have reporting obligations. Even outside the US, the logic is similar: someone must record a value and report the income/expense under local rules.
For many businesses the core problem is simple: money needs to be ready for payouts, but keeping a large stablecoin balance idle is inefficient.
That’s useful when you want predictable cash flow and fewer “manual investigations” later.
In 2026, stablecoin salaries and contractor payouts are no longer a niche thing for crypto startups—they’re a tool businesses test for specific needs: cross-border speed, predictable payout timing, and simpler treasury operations. The approach that works best is the boring one: policy, records, proof, and separated wallets.