If you’ve ever dealt with failed credit card charges on a SaaS subscription, you know the pain. ConfirmoPay thinks stablecoins can fix that, and it just shipped a product to prove it.
The crypto payment gateway has launched Subscribe, a service that lets businesses automate recurring USDC collections on Solana. Think of it as Stripe’s subscription billing, except the rails are a blockchain instead of Visa’s network. No third-party processors, no manual invoicing, just programmatic money movement.
How Subscribe actually works
Subscribe builds on Solana’s Subscriptions & Allowances program, which launched on June 2, 2026. That program essentially lets users pre-authorize recurring token transfers from their wallets, similar to how you’d set up autopay with a bank account, except entirely on-chain.
In English: a customer approves a spending allowance for a merchant, and the merchant can automatically pull the agreed-upon USDC amount at regular intervals. No card networks skimming fees. No chargebacks. No “your payment method has expired” emails.
The service supports SPL tokens and Token-2022, including confidential transfers. That last bit matters because it means businesses can process payments with an added privacy layer, something enterprise clients tend to care about quite a lot when moving money around.
ConfirmoPay is targeting SaaS businesses specifically, which makes sense. Subscription software companies live and die by recurring revenue, and any friction in the billing process directly hits their bottom line. Traditional payment processors typically take 2.9% plus a per-transaction fee on recurring charges. On-chain settlement on Solana costs a fraction of a cent.
The company behind the product
ConfirmoPay isn’t some weekend hackathon project. The company, operating under the Confirmo brand, has been in the crypto payments space for over 12 years. That’s practically ancient by industry standards, predating most of the tokens people trade today.
The numbers back up the track record. Confirmo processes more than $80 million monthly for enterprise clients across 141 countries. The platform runs at 99.97% uptime, which translates to roughly 2.6 hours of downtime per year.
Subscribe joins an existing product suite that already includes Checkout, Deposits, and Payouts. The company is also licensed under the EU’s MiCA regulations, giving it a compliance foundation that many crypto payment startups still lack.
Why Solana, and why now
Solana has been methodically building out its payment infrastructure for years. The chain launched Solana Pay back in 2022, establishing its ambitions in the commerce space early. Since then, the ecosystem has expanded through integrations with firms like Helius, Dynamic, and Mesh, all of which served as design partners for the Subscriptions & Allowances program.
What this means for investors
Processing $80 million monthly already puts Confirmo in serious territory. For comparison, that’s nearly a billion dollars annually flowing through a single crypto payment processor.
The risk side of the equation isn’t trivial either. Stablecoin regulatory frameworks are still evolving globally, and any changes to USDC’s status or Solana’s regulatory treatment could impact the viability of products built on top of them.
For those tracking the Solana ecosystem specifically, the Subscriptions & Allowances program represents a meaningful infrastructure upgrade that goes beyond ConfirmoPay. The design partners already involved, including Helius, Dynamic, and Mesh, suggest this is being treated as core infrastructure rather than a peripheral feature.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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