Pharos Network Brings USDC and CCTP to Upcoming Mainnet in Push for RealFi Infrastructure

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Pharos Network said today that it will bring USDC and Circle’s Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol, or CCTP, to its upcoming mainnet, The Pacific Ocean, in a move the project says will strengthen its push to build a global settlement layer for RealFi, or real-world finance onchain. The announcement positions Pharos as another Layer-1 blockchain aiming to make stablecoin settlement and cross-chain capital movement more practical for developers, institutions and users who want to move value without relying on fragmented bridge infrastructure.

At the center of the integration is USDC, Circle’s fully reserved, dollar-denominated stablecoin. Pharos said USDC will act as a core settlement and collateral asset across tokenized real-world assets, DeFi trading and lending, and global payment flows. Circle’s own announcement described Pharos as a high-throughput, fast-finality, EVM-compatible Layer-1 designed for compliant financial applications, tokenized RWAs, regulated DeFi and instant stablecoin payments. That combination suggests Pharos is trying to make stablecoin usage feel less like a side feature and more like the base layer for its financial stack.

The bigger technical piece is CCTP. Circle says the protocol enables native USDC transfers across blockchains by burning USDC on the source chain and minting it on the destination chain, which removes the need for traditional bridge liquidity pools or wrapped tokens. In Pharos’ case, the project says CCTP will connect its network to more than 20 supported blockchains and open more than 400 secure transaction routes, giving users and developers a cleaner way to move USDC across ecosystems while keeping the asset native throughout the transfer path.

That matters because cross-chain liquidity has long been one of crypto’s messiest problems. When capital has to pass through third-party bridges or wrapped assets, users often inherit extra complexity and risk. Pharos and Circle are both framing the new integration as a way to simplify that flow. Circle says CCTP supports secure native transfers without wrapped tokens, and Pharos says the setup should improve asset integrity and capital efficiency across supported networks. In practical terms, that means developers building on Pharos may be able to create payments apps, lending markets and structured financial products that settle in a more direct way than many existing cross-chain designs allow.

Powering RealFi Settlement Layer

Pharos Foundation representative Wish Wu said the integration is meant to bring institutional-grade reliability to the network while keeping it accessible to developers and users worldwide. The company’s message is consistent with the broader pitch behind Pharos, which describes itself as a modular blockchain with parallel execution across both EVM and WASM environments. Pharos also says it has seed funding backed by Hack VC and Faction VC, and the latest announcement comes alongside a $10 million ecosystem incubator program intended to support builders creating native applications on the network.

For institutions, the integration could be especially relevant if Pharos succeeds in attracting tokenized treasuries, private credit products, commodities and other real-world assets. Pharos says USDC on the network can function as the primary settlement and collateral asset for those instruments, while also supporting merchant payments and payment-service-provider settlement. Circle also noted that USDC on Pharos will offer access to its regulated, fully reserved stablecoin and institutional fiat on- and off-ramps for eligible users, which could make the network more attractive to enterprises that care about compliance and predictable settlement rails.

The timing is also notable. Circle published a preview of the integration on March 27, and Pharos followed with its main announcement on March 29, showing that the two companies are moving in sync as the mainnet launch approaches. Pharos says once the USDC and CCTP deployment goes live, the network will be open to developers, financial institutions and enterprises looking for stable, high-performance infrastructure for real-world financial applications.

In a market where many projects still talk about “real-world utility” without much to show for it, Pharos is trying to anchor its story in a very specific use case: stablecoin settlement for tokenized finance. If the mainnet launch lands as planned, USDC and CCTP could give the network a practical advantage by tying together compliance-minded infrastructure, native stablecoin liquidity and cross-chain mobility in one place.

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