Solutions · Freelancers

Get paid in USDC, anywhere in the world.

Invoice clients and receive USDC on Arbitrum in seconds — skip the 3–5 day wire, the 5–7% remittance cut, and the platform holds. Keep it dollar-stable or settle to a local account.

Freelancers can invoice clients and get paid in USDC on Arbitrum in seconds, avoiding 3–5 day international wires and 5–7% remittance fees. Furlpay settles to a local USD/EUR account or lets you hold a dollar-stable balance — for a flat 0.5%.

Cross-border pay that respects your margin

Paid in seconds

USDC settles on Arbitrum in about a second — no multi-day wire or ACH wait.

Keep more

0.5% instead of the 5–7% common on international remittance and some payout platforms.

No holds

Funds are yours on settlement — no rolling reserve or account freeze at an intermediary's discretion.

Dollar-stable

Hold USDC to avoid local-currency volatility, or settle to a local bank account when you want fiat.

Simple invoices

Share a payment link; the client pays in USDC and you get a signed receipt for your records.

Global clients

Accept from clients in any country without them needing a specific card network or bank.

Frequently asked questions

How do freelancers get paid in USDC?

Share a Furlpay payment link with your client, they pay in USDC on Arbitrum, and the funds settle to your account in about a second for 0.5%. You can hold the balance as dollar-stable USDC or settle to a local bank account.

Is this cheaper than PayPal or a wire?

Usually. International wires and remittance often cost 5–7% plus FX spread and take days; some payout platforms add currency-conversion fees and holds. USDC settles in seconds for a flat 0.5% with no FX markup.

Can I convert USDC to my local currency?

Yes. You can settle to a local USD or EUR account through Furlpay's banking rails, or hold USDC to keep a dollar-stable balance and convert when the rate suits you.

Invoice in USDC

Get paid in seconds, keep more of it.

Furlpay is not a bank. Crypto assets can lose value and are not deposit-insured.