Morph has recently announced that BlockSec is joining the Morph Payment Accelerator as its official audit partner. The partnership gives payment companies building on Morph direct access to professional smart contract audits and penetration testing, with a 20% discount on audit services exclusively for Payment Accelerator participants.
For a program designed to scale real-world payment products on Morph mainnet, having a dedicated security partner in place before companies go live is a meaningful structural addition.
What BlockSec Actually Does
BlockSec is not a generalist security firm that added smart contract audits to its service list after the fact. The company was built around the principle that security research and real-world protection belong in the same organization.
Its work spans smart contract audits, infrastructure security reviews, and real-time threat monitoring through its Phalcon product suite, which gives clients ongoing visibility into live protocol activity rather than a one-time pre-launch check.
Its client base covers a wide range of onchain environments: DeFi protocols, centralized exchanges, stablecoin issuers, and crypto payment providers across multiple markets. That range matters here.
Payment infrastructure sits at the intersection of several of those categories simultaneously, and a security firm that has only ever audited DeFi code is not the same as one that has worked directly with payment-focused products handling continuous user fund flows.
As part of the Morph partnership, BlockSec will provide participating companies with smart contract audits, penetration testing, and security guidance throughout the build and deployment process. Eligible Payment Accelerator projects can reach out directly to begin the audit process and access the discounted rate.
Why Payment Products Face a Different Security Bar
There is a tendency in the onchain space to treat security as a universal concern with universal solutions. Smart contract audits are smart contract audits. In practice, payment infrastructure operates under a distinct set of requirements that most audit checklists were not originally designed around.
A DeFi protocol experiencing an exploit typically affects liquidity providers and traders who understood the risk profile of what they were using.
A payment gateway processing thousands of daily transactions for merchants and end consumers operates in a different accountability environment entirely. Downtime is a business failure. A fund loss event is potentially a regulatory one. The threshold for what counts as acceptable security is higher, and the consequences of falling short are less contained.
This is before factoring in the specific attack surfaces that payment products introduce. High-frequency transaction patterns, predictable settlement windows, and integration with off-chain systems all create vectors that standard DeFi audit frameworks may not fully address.
Penetration testing becomes relevant in ways it rarely is for isolated onchain protocols. BlockSec’s experience across both smart contract and infrastructure security makes it suited to cover that broader surface area.
About the Morph Payment Accelerator
The $150 million Payment Accelerator , backed by the BGB ecosystem, is a performance-based program for payment companies, financial institutions, and infrastructure providers building on Morph.
Most accelerator programs pay out on milestones or proposal quality. This one pays on volume. Incentives are tied to verified stablecoin payment settled on Morph mainnet, so the companies that move more money earn more. There is no optimizing for program mechanics here.
Target verticals include crypto cards and digital issuing, cross-border remittance platforms, and merchant payment gateways. Participants build on Morph’s near-instant settlement infrastructure, lower operating costs relative to traditional payment rails, and programmable onchain functionality designed for payment flows at scale.
Final Words
The BlockSec partnership adds a security standard to that foundation. Rather than leaving each participating company to independently source and fund its own audit process, the accelerator now provides a direct path to credible security coverage at a reduced cost.
For early-stage payment companies where budget constraints can push security timelines later than they should be, that structure removes a real friction point. It also raises the overall quality floor for what gets built and shipped within the program, which benefits every participant as the ecosystem grows.

