Walmart-backed financial app OnePay has significantly expanded its cryptocurrency offerings, adding over a dozen tokens including Solana (SOL) and Polygon (POL). The company’s executive stated the new assets meet a “high bar” of customer demand, liquidity, and regulatory clarity. This move aligns with a broader industry trend toward building comprehensive “superapps” for financial services.
OnePay, majority-owned by Walmart, has added more than a dozen crypto tokens to its platform. The executive responsible for digital assets said these offerings “meet a high bar” set by the banking app’s customers.
Since initially offering Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH), OnePay recently added SUI (SUI), Polygon (POL), and Arbitrum (ARB). This followed the listing of ten other tokens, including Solana (SOL), Cardano (ADA), Bitcoin Cash (BCH), and PAX Gold (PAXG).
“We plan on continuing to expand thoughtfully, prioritizing assets that meet a high bar: demand, liquidity, regulatory clarity and long-term utility,” said Ron Rojany, OnePay’s general manager, Core App & Crypto. “We’re less focused on chasing the latest asset and more focused on offering a curated set of assets that align with how our customers actually use and think about their money,” he said.
Rojany would not disclose specific adoption figures but noted strong engagement from customers newer to crypto. OnePay positions itself as a U.S. version of a “superapp,” modeled after China’s WeChat, offering banking services and a digital wallet usable in Walmart stores. Walmart’s U.S. operations had net sales of $462.4 billion in fiscal 2025 according to its latest annual report.
Other companies are also pursuing superapp strategies. Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong recently outlined plans for a crypto superapp offering credit cards and payments. Japan’s Startale Group said it would use funding from a $50 million Series A round to develop its own superapp integrating payments and asset management.
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Paul Atkins expressed support for platforms offering multiple financial services under one framework. “I have directed the Commission staff to develop further guidance and proposals ultimately to make this ‘super-app’ vision a reality,” Atkins stated in July.
