#StripeStablecoinAccounts
The second day of Stripe Sessions is gone. After Tuesday’s opening, where Stripe's CEO John Collison revealed that Stripe processed $1.4 trillion in 2024, or 1.3% of global GDP, the spotlight shifted from numbers to product.
On the first day, Collison sat down with Mark Zuckerberg to discuss AI, privacy, and Stripe’s role as connective tissue in the digital economy. Now, attention has turned to the product stack.
The focus was on four core areas:
Payments, Connect, Revenue, and Money Management. In the Payments keynote, a live demo of Stripe Orchestration showed how businesses can manage multiple payment processors, customize routing, and gain complete visibility within Stripe's platform.
Still regarding payments, there's major announcement:
Klarna will be available by summer with a single click on Link, allowing even first-time Klarna users to check out instantly. Stripe also added Brazil’s Pix and India’s UPI to its list of 125+ payment methods, which already includes stablecoins and real-time payment options. With this, Stripe moves further into local instant payments without losing sight of its global scope.
On the Connect side, Stripe now powers 15,000+ SaaS platforms serving over 10 million businesses.
A new version of Radar was introduced, enabling deeper fraud detection tools: account-level rules, dynamic risk indicators, and intervention capabilities like payout holds or ID checks. These features are available via both API and Dashboard, reinforcing Stripe’s aim to make trust programmable at scale.
For Revenue, the Stripe Billing suite is now used by more than 300,000 companies, including OpenAI, NVIDIA, Midjourney, and others. One highlight was Stripe Scripts, which lets companies define custom logic within the billing cycle
The product push also included tax capabilities in 102 countries, which nearly doubled since 2024, pointing to increasing complexity in global monetization, and Stripe’s intention to abstract it away.
But probably the biggest announcement came in Money Management.