Geography
Crypto cards, by country.
Which cards work where, plus the local regulatory backdrop. The matrix we wished existed when we were picking a card from each country we landed in.
Card availability isn't a yes/no question. The cards on this site are licensed and marketed differently in every jurisdiction, what's live in the UK may not be live in Italy; what's MiCA-compliant in the EU may not have an Australian licence; and the tax position on every crypto-card spend is the regulator's call, not the issuer's.
Each country profile linked below answers four questions for that market:
- Which cards are actually live for residents of that country today.
- Who regulates them locally, the financial regulator(s), the AML body, and what they require from issuers.
- How the local tax authority treats crypto-card spend, because every spend is a disposal of a crypto asset, and tax rules differ sharply between markets.
- Which card we'd pick in that country and why, accounting for limits, fees, regulatory durability, and how locals actually use the product.
If your country isn't covered yet, the closest profile to your situation is usually whichever one shares your card's regulatory home (UK profile for FCA-licensed issuers, Italy for MiCA, etc.). Country coverage expands as we add depth on each market.
| Country | Cards live | Local regulator | Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| United Kingdom | 7 | FCA | Most mature crypto-card market in Europe. Every major issuer live; FCA promo rules in force. | View → |
| Italy | 10 | OAM · MiCA | Widest EU choice. Heavy tax regime (26% CGT + 0.2% stamp duty). MiCA reshapes the field from 2026-07. | View → |
| Australia | 7 | AUSTRAC · ASIC | AUSTRAC-registered providers. CGT applies on every spend. CARF reporting from 2026. | View → |
| Singapore | 7 | MAS | MAS-licensed under PSA. No capital gains tax for personal holders. Premium multi-card audience. | View → |