The state of crypto cards 2026

What the numbers really say about 93 crypto cards analysed: real cashback, hidden costs, fees and regulation. All figures are verified and derived from the plans, not from marketing claims.

4.2% average cashback (where offered)
10% highest advertised cashback
0% require token staking
58% with no annual fee
61% with zero FX markup
2% MiCA-licensed

The "up to X%" cashback is almost always conditional

Across 46 cards with cashback, the real average is 4.2%, far from the "up to 10%" headlines. 0% of cards require locking tokens in staking to approach the top rate; without it, effective cashback collapses.

The hidden costs are in FX, not in the annual fee

58% of cards have no annual fee — but only 61% remove the FX markup, the cost that hits hardest when spending abroad. That is where the real cost difference hides, not in the annual fee.

Regulation is still a minority

Only 2% of cards hold a MiCA licence, the European framework for crypto-assets, and 16% operate without KYC. Verifiable regulation is still a differentiator, not the standard.

The genuinely cheapest cards

Ranked by net annual cost on the standard spending profile, the most affordable cards are:

Method: data derived from the real plans of 93 cards. Methodology · Download the dataset