Every brand gift card you can buy with Bitcoin, USDT and other crypto — with the real fees, region rules and redemption steps for each. Pick a card to dive in.

Turn crypto into Amazon balance for almost anything.
Open →Groceries, electronics and essentials (US).
Open →Everyday US retail, online and in-store.
Open →Millions of listings, buyer protection included.
Open →Wallet credit for PC games — mind the currency region.
Open →PSN credit for games and PS Plus; country-locked.
Open →Games, Game Pass and Windows apps in one balance.
Open →Switch games and Online; strictly region-locked.
Open →Robux and Premium — capped, kid-friendly.
Open →Universal credit across hundreds of games.
Open →Bits and subscriptions to back streamers.
Open →Apps, games and subscriptions on Android.
Open →App Store, iCloud+ and Apple Music on crypto.
Open →Stream with no bank card and no surprise renewals.
Open →Disney, Pixar, Marvel & Star Wars on crypto.
Open →Premium music without a recurring card.
Open →One balance for rides and food delivery.
Open →Food delivery credit, applied automatically.
Open →Load the app, tap to pay, earn Stars.
Open →Put crypto toward stays and experiences.
Open →Spend across millions of PayPal merchants.
Open →Open-loop spending almost anywhere Visa works.
Open →Flexible crypto spending on the Mastercard network.
Open →This page is your map to spending crypto on real-world brands. Each card above links to a dedicated guide with that brand's actual fees, its region rules, the cheapest coin to pay with, and a step-by-step redemption walkthrough. If you're new to all this, read our buying guide first, then come back and pick a brand.
Gift cards split into two practical groups. Closed-loop cards (Amazon, Steam, PlayStation, Xbox, Google Play, Apple, Netflix, eBay) work at exactly one retailer or ecosystem and are the cheapest, simplest way to spend crypto on a specific service. Open-loop cards (prepaid Visa and Mastercard) work almost anywhere that accepts the card network, trading a little extra cost and verification for go-anywhere flexibility. Knowing which group you need is half the decision.
Whichever brand you choose, you'll buy it from one of a handful of platforms. Here's the comparison we keep coming back to:
| Platform | Best for | Typical fee* | Coins | KYC | Links |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CEX.IO | Buying the crypto first (licensed) | From 0% maker / spread | BTC, ETH, USDT + | Yes | Visit · Review |
| Bitrefill | Instant email delivery, Lightning | Face value–2% | BTC, LTC, ETH, USDT, DOGE | No (limits) | Visit · Review |
| Coinsbee | Widest brand catalog (5,000+) | ~1–3% + network | 60+ incl. XMR, SOL | Tiered | Visit · Review |
| Binance Gift Card | Sending crypto as a gift | Low / spread | BTC, BNB, USDT + | Yes | Visit · Review |
| Crypto.com | App users & prepaid spending | App spread | CRO, BTC, ETH + | Yes | Visit · Review |
*Fees are indicative ranges from our 2026 testing and each provider's published terms; always confirm the exact rate and network fee at checkout before you pay.
No matter which brand you pick, two rules decide whether your purchase goes smoothly. Rule one: match the region. Almost every gift card is locked to a country or currency and must match the account you redeem it on — a US card won't work on a UK account. Rule two: pick the cheap coin. The service fee is usually small and fixed, but the network fee swings wildly by coin; USDT on a low-fee network, Litecoin or Bitcoin Lightning keep small purchases near face value, while congested on-chain Bitcoin can quietly add dollars. Internalise these two and you'll rarely make an expensive mistake.
One of the quiet joys of crypto gift cards is speed: codes are almost always delivered by email within seconds to a few minutes of your payment confirming, so there's no shipping wait and nothing physical to lose. Treat the code itself like cash — anyone who sees it can redeem it, so don't paste it into public chats or leave it sitting in a shared inbox. Buy only from established platforms with real support channels; the main way people get burned is buying "cheap" codes from unknown resellers that turn out to be already redeemed. Stick to the platforms in our comparison and that risk all but disappears.
If you want maximum everyday usefulness, an Amazon card covers the widest range of physical goods. Gamers will reach for Steam, PlayStation or Xbox depending on platform. For phones and apps, Google Play and Apple are the obvious picks, while Netflix keeps streaming off your bank card. And when you need to spend crypto somewhere no single brand card reaches, a prepaid Visa or Mastercard fills the gap. Whatever you choose, start by getting clean crypto on a licensed exchange — that's step one for every card on this page.
Buy BTC, USDT or LTC on a FinCEN-registered, Gibraltar-licensed exchange, then spend it on any brand above. New users can claim the current CEX.IO welcome bonus.
A huge range — Amazon, Steam, PlayStation, Xbox, Google Play, Apple/iTunes, Netflix, eBay and prepaid Visa/Mastercard are all covered here, and platforms like Coinsbee list thousands more brands across 185+ countries.
Cost is less about the brand and more about how you pay. Buy from a platform selling near face value and pay with a low-fee coin (USDT, Litecoin, or Bitcoin Lightning) to keep any card close to face value.
Almost all closed-loop brand cards are region- or currency-locked and must match your account. Prepaid Visa/Mastercard have their own country-of-use rules. Always match the region before buying.
On a licensed exchange. We recommend starting on a regulated on-ramp like CEX.IO so your funds are clean, then spending on a gift-card platform such as Bitrefill or Coinsbee.