Circle’s euro-pegged stablecoin EURC is showing the strongest uptake in Spain for retail payments, according to Brighty’s platform data analyzed by Cointelegraph. In 2025 and through the first quarter of 2026, Spain accounted for about 36% of EURC transactions and 25% of EURC’s total on Brighty, signaling a distinctly retail-oriented pattern for euro-stablecoins on the continent.
“For Spanish users, EURC functions essentially as a standard euro on a card with no exchange rate friction when transacting against USDC,” Brighty co-founder Nick Denisenko told Cointelegraph. The comments underscore a broader trend: euro-stablecoins may see meaningful adoption in Europe’s consumer payments as MiCA-era rails and local banking partnerships mature.
The Brighty data offer an early glimpse into how euro-denominated tokens could fit into everyday European commerce, even as euro-stablecoins remain smaller than their US dollar counterparts in overall market share.
Brighty’s breakdown shows Spain as the clearest example of a retail-first EURC footprint within Europe. The relatively modest average payment size—roughly 49 euros—and the platform’s observation of widespread small-value use point to EURC functioning as a practical euro substitute for everyday purchases and peer-to-peer transfers.
Denisenko noted that Spanish users have also been active with stablecoin-based yield features on Brighty, reinforcing that euro-token activity there extends beyond simple payments toward broader financial utilities within crypto-enabled wallets and services.
Italy ranks second in EURC activity on Brighty, representing about 15.5% of transactions and 18% of volume. Germany sits close behind with roughly 13% of transactions and 19% of volume, where the average payment is around 105 euros. France, by contrast, shows a markedly different usage profile, with an average EURC transaction of about 171 euros, more than three times Spain’s level, suggesting greater involvement in larger transfers rather than daily retail spend.
These patterns point to divergent adoption curves across major European markets. While Spain emphasizes everyday, small-value payments, France’s higher average ticket hints at usage tied to more substantial transfers or business-related activity. Italy and Germany straddle the line, reflecting a mix of retail and higher-value usage that aligns with broader consumer and business adoption trends in those economies.
According to Denisenko, the Spanish market’s distinctive retail focus aligns with a wider European narrative: crypto familiarity and institutional readiness appear to be higher in Spain relative to some peers. “When we engage with counterparts at major Spanish banks, we consistently observe a remarkably high degree of competence even among frontline staff — which is not something one takes for granted elsewhere,” he said. This environment, he suggested, may help explain why EURC has found traction in everyday spending in Spain and why it’s drawing attention as a potential pattern for other European economies under MiCA regulation.
Related coverage in Cointelegraph has noted that European banks are actively pursuing MiCA-compliant euro-stablecoin rails, underscoring the regulatory and infrastructural context in which EURC operates. In particular, industry participants have highlighted efforts by institutions to integrate euro-stablecoins into existing payment rails, settlement workflows, and wallet ecosystems as Europe positions itself for broader stablecoin adoption.
The Spanish momentum also echoes a broader market signal: euro-stablecoins could play a meaningful role in European retail, provided there is robust interoperability with banks, card networks, and consumer wallets under the MiCA framework. The data from Brighty suggest that where retail adoption is strongest, euro tokens can become a practical fiat proxy, reducing friction in cross-border or cross-currency spending when paired with widely used stablecoins like USDC or other euro-denominated equivalents.
For Circle and EURC, the Spain-driven retail pattern offers a concrete case study of how euro-stablecoins might scale in Europe’s consumer economy. It also raises questions about how other markets will respond as MiCA’s regulatory provisions come into sharper effect and as banks continue to explore compliant, euro-focused stablecoin solutions.
As European markets digest these developments, observers will be watching how retail merchants, banks, and wallet providers harmonize EURC usage with consumer protections, fee structures, and merchant acceptance. The next set of Brighty data, alongside MiCA implementation milestones, could shed further light on whether Spain’s early adoption translates into a broader continental shift toward euro-stablecoins in everyday finance.
For readers seeking a broader regulatory backdrop, recent coverage highlighted ongoing moves by European banks toward MiCA-compliant euro stablecoins, illustrating the sector-wide effort to standardize euro token usage across payments, settlements, and value transfers.
Watch next for Brighty’s continued quarterly findings and for regulatory updates that could either accelerate or reframe euro-stablecoin adoption across Europe as institutions test, adopt, and scale euro-denominated digital currencies in real-world commerce.
This article was originally published as Spain Leads Europe in EURC Retail Market, Brighty Data Shows on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.
