
Where People Actually Spend With Crypto Cards: 2026 Data
$607 Million a Month — and That's Still an Incomplete Picture
In March 2026, tracked on-chain crypto card spending volume reached $607 million a month — roughly a 6x increase over 18 months, up from $100 million a year and a half ago and $187 million a year ago. Cumulative volume since tracking began has topped $6.5 billion across 21 million transactions, according to Paymentscan and Obchakevich Research, based on Dune Analytics data. And that data still isn't the full picture: major players like Crypto.com, Binance, Coinbase and Wirex process part of their volume off-chain, creating a gap of roughly $230 million between Paymentscan's $607 million and the $377 million actually visible on-chain.
One Card Holds Three-Quarters of the Market
Among cards whose volume is visible on-chain, RedotPay dominates outright — $283.9 million in March 2026, or about 75% of tracked volume (other estimates put it as high as 80%). Second place goes to ether.fi Cash at $47.8 million (+42.7% year over year) — unlike RedotPay, which operates mainly as a custodial deposit card, ether.fi positions itself specifically as a card for everyday real-world spending. Together, RedotPay and ether.fi control 88% of tracked market volume.
RedotPay has more than 6 million registered users across over 100 countries and roughly $10 billion in annualized payment volume, BitKE reports. We've already covered how the most popular cards actually work in our comparison of five leading crypto cards.
Geography: Not the US and Europe, But Southeast Asia, Africa and Latin America
The main markets for crypto cards aren't wealthy Western countries — they're regions with weak local currencies and limited access to banking:
- Southeast Asia — Vietnam (crypto only became a separate tax category in January 2026), the Philippines (stablecoins used as a primary savings vehicle), and Thailand (a five-year capital gains tax exemption on crypto, running through 2029).
- Africa and Latin America — Nigeria, where stablecoins have become a hedge against naira inflation, and Brazil, where stablecoins account for roughly 90% of all crypto activity.
- Separate data on RedotPay's own user base shows heavy concentration in India, Egypt and Bangladesh as well, with the US contributing only a small share of the platform's traffic.
Who's Building the Infrastructure Underneath
Behind the familiar cards sit infrastructure companies that connect them to the Visa and Mastercard networks. Rain — which holds principal membership status directly with Visa — raised $250 million in a Series C round in January 2026 at a $1.95 billion valuation, works with more than 150 partner services across 150+ jurisdictions, and reached $3 billion in annualized volume, a 38x increase over 2025. StraitsX, which sponsors the RedotPay card through its bank identification number (BIN), grew its volume 40x between Q4 2024 and Q4 2025.
The upshot: the crypto card market isn't growing on speculative interest in wealthy countries — it's growing on a fairly pragmatic need: converting an unstable local currency into digital dollars and spending them wherever Visa or Mastercard is accepted, which is to say, almost anywhere.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

Author
Sonic NewsWriter
The cryptocurrency market energizes me like lightning. The rise and fall of assets is always in my sights. Not a single piece of news escapes my attention.
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