The Wallet Decade has begun.
Plastic just lost its grip on global commerce — and the corridors Belmoney serves are exactly where the next chapter is being written.
63% online. 42% in store. The math finally turned.
For the first time, digital wallets command a clear majority of global e-commerce checkout — squeezing the combined credit and debit card share down to just 24%. At physical points of sale, wallets now outpace credit card usage by a 2-to-1 margin. The transition from plastic to digital interface is no longer a forecast. It's the present.
For an industry built on card rails — issuers, schemes, processors — this is a re-architecture moment. For payment institutions like Belmoney, whose infrastructure was designed wallet-native from day one, it's a structural tailwind.
The twin-front takeover
The compounding gap between wallets and cards is not a temporary post-COVID artifact. By 2030, wallet dominance accelerates on both fronts — and cards continue their measured retreat across every channel.
| Channel | Instrument | 2030 Share | Δ vs. Today |
|---|---|---|---|
| E-commerce | Digital Wallets | 63% | +7 pp |
| E-commerce | Credit Cards | 16% | −4 pp |
| E-commerce | Debit Cards | 8% | −2 pp |
| Physical (POS) | Digital Wallets | 42% | +9 pp |
| Physical (POS) | Credit Cards | 21% | −3 pp |
| Physical (POS) | Debit Cards | 19% | −3 pp |
Source: Worldpay Global Payments Report 2025; FIS forecasts; Statista cross-reference.
Three wallets. Three economies. One winner per region.
"Digital wallet" is a category, not a product. Beneath it sit three architectures — each tied to the financial culture that produced it. For cross-border payment providers, knowing which one dominates which corridor is now table stakes.
Card-Led Wallets
Dominant in: North America, Western Europe, Australia
Apple Pay, Google Pay, PayPal, Cash App, Shop Pay. These wallets digitize the existing card rail rather than replace it — meaning interchange, schemes, and issuers still capture the economics. A change in user behavior, not in market structure.
A2A / Bank-Led Wallets
Dominant in: India, Latin America, parts of the EU
PhonePe, Paytm, Nequi, Wero, Mercado Pago, GoPay, ShopeePay. These wallets bypass card networks entirely, settling directly account-to-account. Pix in Brazil, UPI in India, and SEPA Instant in the EU are the rails beneath them — exactly the corridors where Belmoney's RaaS infrastructure already terminates.
Superapps
Dominant in: China, Southeast Asia
Alipay, WeChat Pay, GCash, KakaoPay, Mercado Pago (in its expanded role). Payments are one feature of an entire digital ecosystem encompassing chat, commerce, lending, and identity. The user never leaves the app — and inbound remittances must arrive directly inside it.
Even the fortress is breaching
The United States — the most card-loyal market on earth — is the test case. Wallet usage at physical checkouts leaps from 17% to 26%. Online, digital wallets cement their lead at 44% by 2030, while combined credit and debit drop to 42%. Credit cards alone fall from 40% to 36% at POS; debit from 28% to 25%.
The demographic signal is the one to watch. Generational replacement is not a campaign — it's gravity. The card-default consumer is aging out, and the wallet-default consumer is taking over the median wallet share, dollar by dollar, every quarter.
Cross-border payments are the next wallet battleground
The wallet revolution has been narrated mostly as a domestic checkout story. The bigger shift is upstream: every cross-border money flow now needs to terminate in a wallet — not a card, often not even a bank account. The recipient in Bogotá wants Nequi. The family in Mumbai wants PhonePe. The business in Jakarta wants GoPay.
- RaaS partners deploying remittance flows can no longer treat wallet payout as an optional add-on. In A2A-dominant corridors, it is the corridor.
- Payment HUB integrations built on Belmoney's PSD2-licensed rails are positioned to connect issuer-side card flows in the EU and US directly to A2A wallet payout in LATAM, India, and Southeast Asia — the exact handoff the global payment system needs.
- The window is now. The 2030 forecast assumes incumbents will adapt. Most won't, fast enough. The corridor leaders for the next decade are being chosen this year.