DoorDash Explores Stablecoin Payroll as Tempo Attracts Major Clients
Summary
DoorDash is collaborating with Tempo—backed by Stripe and Paradigm—to test paying delivery workers using stablecoins.
Tempo has introduced a “stablecoin consulting” division to help companies integrate blockchain-based payments into their existing financial systems.
Major players including Visa, Coastal Community Bank, Fifth Third Bank, and Howard Hughes Holdings are already building or connecting to Tempo’s infrastructure.
DoorDash pilots crypto-based wages
DoorDash has partnered with Tempo to explore the possibility of paying its delivery workforce in stablecoins, signaling a potential shift toward blockchain-powered payroll in the gig economy. The initiative is part of Tempo’s newly launched advisory service, which helps businesses identify practical use cases for stablecoins and integrate them into existing payment and banking systems.
Tempo, developed with backing from Stripe and Paradigm, is building a layer-1 blockchain focused on fast, low-cost stablecoin transactions rather than speculative trading. Positioned as a “payments-first” network, it aims to support real-world use cases like payroll, remittances, and automated machine payments, with transaction fees settled directly in dollar-pegged stablecoins.
Enterprise adoption gains momentum
Tempo’s consulting arm will work closely with corporate clients to design treasury flows and embed stablecoin capabilities into traditional finance stacks. Firms like Coastal Community Bank and ARQ are already developing infrastructure on the network, while companies such as Visa, OnePay, Felix, Fifth Third Bank, and Howard Hughes Holdings are integrating parts of their payment systems with Tempo.
Stripe views Tempo as a natural evolution of its existing payment rails, enabling always-on, blockchain-based settlement for global payouts and high-frequency transactions. Meanwhile, Paradigm sees the project as filling a key gap in crypto infrastructure—shifting the focus from trading to reliable, regulated payment use cases.
If the DoorDash pilot proves successful, it could offer a blueprint for large platforms to move portions of payroll, supplier payments, and embedded finance services onto stablecoin rails. For workers and businesses, this may mean faster and more flexible payouts, while regulators will face increasing pressure to define how stablecoin-based wages fit into existing financial and labor frameworks.



