Polygon Wallet Launches Shielded USDC and USDT Payments Using Zero-Knowledge Proof Technology - Blockonomi

by · Blockonomi

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  • Polygon Wallet’s new “Privately Send” option hides sender, receiver, and transfer amount from onchain observers.
    Every private transfer passes through KYT screening before execution, keeping the feature fully compliance-ready.
    Zero-knowledge proofs verify each transaction cryptographically while keeping all participant details completely confidential. Polygon Labs targets treasury teams, fintechs, and businesses seeking private but regulation-friendly stablecoin payment rails.

Polygon Labs has launched shielded stablecoin payments inside its consumer wallet, supporting USDC and USDT transfers.

The new feature routes transactions through Hinkal’s shielded pool using zero-knowledge proofs. Sender details, receiver information, and transfer amounts remain hidden from on-chain observers.

Every private transaction undergoes Know Your Transaction screening before execution. The protocol operates on a non-custodial basis, meaning no operator holds assets during transfers.

Polygon Wallet Now Offers a “Privately Send” Option

Users inside the Polygon wallet now see a “Privately Send” option alongside the standard send flow. Selecting it routes the transfer through Hinkal’s shielded pool rather than a standard on-chain transfer. The integration was built in collaboration with privacy protocol Hinkal and went live on Monday.

Outside observers can confirm a valid transfer occurred through zero-knowledge proof verification. However, they cannot identify the participants or the size of the transfer.

Polygon Labs addressed the compliance question directly, stating that “privacy in this context means opacity to the market, not opacity to regulators.” This distinction separates the feature from shielded-pool designs that have historically drawn regulatory scrutiny.

Polygon Labs framed the launch as a direct play for institutional payment flows. The team wrote that “confidentiality has been the single biggest gap between onchain rails and what institutional finance actually needs to move serious stablecoin volume.”

Treasury teams, fintechs running payroll, and businesses settling internal flows across entities are among the primary target users.

The Hinkal integration marks the first user-facing privacy capability shipped at the wallet layer for Polygon. Polygon Labs also signaled that more privacy offerings are in the works across its broader stack going forward.

Broader Institutional Push Powers Polygon’s Privacy Move

The launch fits into Polygon Labs’ wider Open Money Stack initiative, which has seen several payments-focused announcements recently.

A Visa partner settlement integration and a Meta deal for USDC creator payouts in Colombia and the Philippines are among recent milestones. These moves reflect a consistent pattern of expanding regulated payment infrastructure.

Polygon Labs also acquired Coinme and Sequence in January to strengthen its fiat access and wallet infrastructure stack.

Those acquisitions rounded out the regulated on-ramp and wallet tooling needed to support institutional-grade products. The Hinkal integration builds directly on that foundation.

The private transfer feature targets businesses that have avoided public chains due to transparency concerns. Stablecoin volume from institutional players has historically stayed off-chain for that reason.

Shielded payments with built-in KYT screening offer a path to bring those flows on-chain without sacrificing compliance.

Three core properties define the design: cryptographic verification via zero-knowledge proof, KYT screening before every execution, and non-custodial asset handling throughout the transfer.

Polygon Labs confirmed the feature is “non-custodial, meaning no operator holds the assets during the transfer.” Together, these properties position the feature as a compliance-ready privacy tool for serious payment use cases.

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