Through a new integration with the Better Payment Network (BPN), Amazon Web Services customers gain a new payment option. They can now use BNB to pay for AWS services.
Instead of paying AWS bills only through banks or card networks, companies can now settle those payments using BNB. The message is broader. BNB is being positioned not just as a trading asset, but as real payment infrastructure.
How BNB Payments Work for AWS Customers
BPN is a payment network built natively on BNB Chain that links digital assets like BNB and stablecoins with traditional finance systems. Through this setup, businesses can pay AWS invoices in BNB with real time settlement. This means the system completes transactions almost instantly rather than in days. Fees are also lower compared to many cross border bank transfers. It often involve intermediaries and foreign exchange costs.
A real world example helps bring this to life. Imagine a startup in Southeast Asia that runs its app on AWS but serves customers worldwide. Instead of juggling multiple bank accounts and currencies to pay monthly cloud bills, the company can use BNB through BPN to settle payments quickly and transparently. This reduces delays, cuts costs, and simplifies accounting.
$BNB payments are now live for @awscloud customers via @bpn_network, a payment infrastructure built natively on BNB Chain
Faster, cheaper, global. This is a real upgrade to how businesses will handle cloud billing.
Read the full story in our blog: https://t.co/LuxiJbo0gD
Full… pic.twitter.com/OwaryOvbEF
— BNB Chain (@BNBCHAIN) December 18, 2025
Rica Fu, Founder of BPN, highlighted that the network is built for secure and scalable transaction processing. By fitting directly into AWS billing workflows, BPN shows how digital assets can streamline enterprise payments without forcing companies to rebuild their systems from scratch.
More About BNB Chain
BNB Smart Chain is improving EVM performance with the Block Access List, or BAL. This is a new feature that boosts efficiency as transaction volume grows. BAL precomputes the storage slots and addresses a transaction will read or write. This allows nodes to fetch required state data in advance instead of discovering it during execution. This reduces latency, improves parallel transaction processing, enables smarter state pre fetching. It makes block reorganizations faster and easier to handle.
High transaction volume demands a better EVM.
Block Access List (BAL) gives BSC upfront visibility into state access, enabling parallel execution and faster block processing.
This is real performance work, not just in theory.
Full breakdown in the blog 👇… pic.twitter.com/xrr7Vqmyh0
— BNB Chain Developers (@BNBChainDevs) December 19, 2025
BAL is already live on BSC through BEP 592. It is a non consensus change that delivers immediate speed and validation gains for node operators. In parallel, BSC has tested the EIP 7928 version of BAL. It aims to standardize this feature across the wider EVM ecosystem by eventually making it part of the block header.
Disclaimer
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