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Circle Launches Nanopayments: Here’s How They Work

In Markets
March 04, 2026

Circle’s Nanopayments lets users send as little as $0.000001 in USDC with zero gas fees. Here is how the new system actually works.

Circle has officially launched Nanopayments on testnet. 

The payment system allows transfers as small as $0.000001 in USDC. It promises zero gas fees, which sounds impossible at first glance. 

But the mechanics behind it explain everything. Circle shared the news on its official channels, sparking interest across the crypto community.

How Circle Nanopayments Cut Gas Costs to Near Zero

The key to Circle Nanopayments is batched settlement. 

If every tiny payment triggered its own onchain transaction, gas fees would make them unviable. Instead, the system collects payment authorizations offchain and bundles them together before settling on the blockchain.

Here is how the process unfolds. 

First, a buyer deposits USDC into the Circle Gateway Wallet. This is the only onchain transaction in the process, meaning gas is only paid once at deposit. From that point, the buyer can authorize payments using EIP-3009 signatures, which are entirely offchain.

When a buyer wants to pay for a resource, they request it from a seller. 

The seller responds through the x402 protocol. The buyer then signs an EIP-3009 message, which authorizes the payment without touching the blockchain. 

Circle Gateway checks the signature, locks the corresponding balance, and the seller delivers the resource right away.

The actual settlement comes later. Circle Gateway periodically gathers all pending payment signatures, calculates net balances, and settles them onchain in a single batch transaction. 

Thousands of payments get consolidated into one. That is why the effective gas cost per transaction drops close to zero.

Related Reading: Circle Posts $770M Q4 Revenue as USDC Supply Hits $75B

The Security Model Behind Circle Gateway

The offchain nature of the payment process raises a fair question about custody. Circle has addressed this directly. Circle Gateway is designed to be non-custodial, not a traditional intermediary holding user funds.

The system runs inside an AWS Nitro Enclave, a trusted execution environment (TEE). 

Inside this environment, EIP-3009 signatures are verified, batch settlement results are computed, and final batch transactions are signed. The signing keys are secured through AWS Key Management Service (KMS).

Crucially, even Circle employees cannot access the enclave or the keys. 

The architecture is built to prevent any single party, including Circle itself, from having unilateral control over user funds. This design addresses one of the core concerns around offchain payment systems.

Why Nanopayments Could Matter for the Agentic Economy

Crypto analyst 100y on social media platform X noted that earlier micropayment solutions largely relied on low-fee blockchains rather than rethinking settlement logic. 

Circle Nanopayments takes a structurally different approach. By moving the bulk of activity offchain and settling in batches, the system sidesteps gas costs without depending on any particular network’s fee structure.

Circle has positioned Nanopayments specifically for AI agents. 

As autonomous agents become more active in digital commerce, they need a way to make high-frequency, small-value payments in real time. Traditional payment rails are too slow and too expensive for that use case. Nanopayments targets exactly that gap.

Use cases like pay-per-API-call or machine-to-machine transactions were simply uneconomical before. With this infrastructure, those models become much more practical. 

The testnet launch is the first step, and broader availability will determine whether the system gains real traction.

The post Circle Launches Nanopayments: Here’s How They Work appeared first on Live Bitcoin News.

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Mary J. Batiste is a blockchain writer and tech journalist who covers NFTs, cryptocurrency trends, and Web3 culture. Her work focuses on making complex crypto concepts accessible and engaging, emphasizing education and community empowerment. In her free time, Mary collects digital art, experiments with blockchain gaming, and contributes to online NFT communities.