Arc makes USDC the native gas token, helping to insulate transaction fees from crypto‑market swings that can affect the market price of volatile gas tokens, and providing a fee‑smoothing algorithm that keeps dollar costs low even when the network is busy. This predictable, USDC‑based model streamlines accounting and treasury workflows. Together, these advances unlock sound economics for everything from everyday payments and stablecoin FX to capital markets settlement and more.
Every kind of transaction, whether it’s swiping a credit card, sending a wire, or converting currencies, comes with a cost for using the underlying infrastructure. These fees help cover the resources that make payments possible. Blockchains are no different: every action on a network requires a small transaction fee to keep things running. In an onchain setting, those fees are known as “gas.” On many mainstream blockchains, gas fees are quoted in the blockchain’s volatile native asset (e.g., ETH, SOL, etc.) and a transaction’s dollar cost depends on:
Of these factors, the token’s market price is typically the most significant source of uncertainty. Its value can swing sharply between the time a transaction is planned and when it actually goes through — creating at best an accounting headache, and at worst a level of volatility that makes blockchain impractical for many enterprises.
Gas fee volatility can significantly complicate accounting processes and business models, making it hard to set consistent pricing for customers. That’s why finance, payments, and enterprise teams often say: “We need predictable fees we can plan around,” and “Our treasury team can’t hold volatile crypto assets to pay gas fees.”
Arc is purpose-built to remove this blocker.
One of Arc’s most visible and important innovations is that USDC is the network’s native gas token. Every transaction fee is paid in USDC, a dollar-pegged stablecoin, not a speculative asset. Because USDC is designed to maintain stable value, enterprises don’t have to worry about their blockchain operating costs rising and falling with crypto market swings.
As mentioned, users experience fluctuations in gas fees due to changing network conditions and changes in the gas token’s market price. Together, these variables can make it nearly impossible to know the exact cost of a transaction in dollars ahead of time.
By eliminating token-price volatility from the equation, Arc makes predictable, dollar-denominated fees possible — reducing accounting complexity and operational friction.
Arc doesn’t stop at dollar denomination; it also stabilizes the level of fees. Arc’s fee market is inspired by Ethereum’s EIP-1559 but tuned for predictability:
The net effect: fees trend low and remain predictable — whether you’re sending $1 or $1B.
Variable | Traditional blockchains | Arc |
---|---|---|
gas units | same | same |
base fee per unit | fluctuates with demand | smoothed moving average |
price of gas token | highly volatile | ≈ $1 (USDC) |
Future roadmap items include enhancements to Circle Paymaster that allow other regulated stablecoins (e.g., EURC) to be used as gas via paymaster routing (i.e., a user could pay transaction fees using EURC or another asset that’s automatically routed through the built-in stablecoin FX engine and converted into USDC behind the scenes), giving global businesses local currency optionality without breaking fee predictability.
Think of Arc like an enterprise-grade network where gas is just another line item in USD. You wouldn’t accept a card processor whose fees unexpectedly jump 20% based on a speculative token price; and, for many important use cases, we don’t think blockchains should work that way either. Arc removes that variable so you can plan, price, and scale with confidence. Here’s how low and predictable gas fees denominated in USDC can benefit your business:
Finance teams need to set aside extra capital to cover the risk that when they replenish their holdings of native gas tokens, their dollar values may have fluctuated significantly — meaning it could cost multiples of their expected spend to maintain the same level of coverage. Because Arc prices every transaction in USDC and employs a smoothed moving average, the fee you approve in an ops meeting should reflect the fee that hits your ledger, allowing budgets and forecasts to lock on a fixed dollar amount rather than a moving target. You can model per-transaction costs just like any other SaaS or payments rail input.
The accounting knock‑on effects can be just as significant. Each time an enterprise pays gas in a volatile asset it may record a taxable disposition and could be required to calculate a mark‑to‑market adjustment. Arc’s USDC fees are designed to be treated like a USD operating expense, with no FX translation layer and no capital gains exposure. It also aligns with how finance teams already think about costs (i.e., in dollars), reducing internal friction between product, finance, and treasury.
Treasury policy can also become simpler. Some corporate treasuries are barred from holding volatile crypto assets, forcing operational teams to work through brokers or swaps every time they need native gas tokens. With Arc, the only asset you need to keep on a balance sheet is USDC, a fiat‑backed stablecoin that’s designed to fit within most cash‑equivalent buckets, reducing policy friction and counterparty risk.
Predictable gas fees unlock a smoother end‑user experience. Customers no longer have to acquire a separate token, watch price charts, or top up volatile balances before interacting with an application. Developers can even sponsor or abstract the fee entirely, debiting a few cents of USDC in the background so that the “blockchain part” of the in-app payment disappears and the product feels as easy as any web or mobile service.
Arc is an open, EVM-compatible Layer 1. That means teams can bring existing tooling to a familiar environment, now paired with predictable USDC gas. When every function call lands at a cost you can quote in dollars, gas stops being a market‑risk caveat and becomes a line item you can lock into a sprint budget. That’s a robust foundation for:
And because Arc integrates natively with the broader Circle platform (e.g., USDC1, and EURC2, USYC3, Mint4, CCTP, Gateway, Wallets, and more), businesses can coordinate value flows across both onchain and offchain systems in a single, enterprise-grade framework.
Arc is purpose-built for stablecoin finance. Low, predictable, dollar-denominated fees aren’t a nice-to-have; they’re a prerequisite for enterprise-scale usage of blockchain and stablecoins.
Explore the Arc litepaper, and visit the Arc website to request private testnet access to benchmark your workloads with predictable, dollar‑based gas.
Arc is offered by Circle Technology Services, LLC (“CTS”). CTS is a software provider and does not provide regulated financial or advisory services. You are solely responsible for services you provide to users, including obtaining any necessary licenses or approvals and otherwise complying with applicable laws.
Arc has not been reviewed or approved by the New York State Department of Financial Services.
The product features described in these materials are for informational purposes only. All product features may be modified, delayed, or cancelled without prior notice, at any time and at the sole discretion of Circle Technology Services, LLC. Nothing herein constitutes a commitment, warranty, guarantee or investment advice.