Revolut launched its first physical crypto card on May 18, a Dogecoin-themed LED card for the UK and EEA.
Summary
Revolut announced on May 18 that it is launching its first physical crypto card, a Dogecoin-themed debit card with an LED display that illuminates at the point of payment. The card works anywhere Visa and Mastercard are accepted, with an initial rollout in the UK and EEA.
The firm said there are no additional exchange fees on crypto payments, though transactions are subject to real-time exchange rates at the point of purchase and may create tax obligations depending on local rules. Revolut converts users’ crypto to fiat automatically at checkout, meaning merchants receive standard settlement currency without touching digital assets directly.
The physical card links to users’ crypto balances and handles the conversion in the background. That removes the primary friction point that has kept crypto spending separate from everyday consumer finance: the need to manually convert before each purchase. Spending limits include a £100,000 cap per transaction and a maximum of 100 exchanges within any 24-hour period.
As crypto.news reported just days earlier, Revolut also secured FCA permissions for leveraged investment products, discretionary portfolio management, and advisory services.
The crypto card launch sits within a broader regulatory and product expansion that also includes its full UK banking licence received in March 2026 and a US banking charter application filed the same month. Revolut serves over 70 million users globally.
Revolut’s distribution scale is the headline fact here. As crypto.news documented in its crypto cards guide, consumer appetite for crypto-linked debit products has grown steadily in 2026 alongside regulatory clarity. Adding a physical card to a 70-million-user platform creates a potential mass adoption vehicle that most crypto-native card products have lacked.
The company’s earlier US banking licence application signals the card will eventually expand beyond the UK and EEA, potentially bringing crypto spending to one of the world’s largest consumer markets.
Tax treatment remains the main practical barrier: crypto payments are taxable sale events in most jurisdictions, meaning frequent spenders need clear record-keeping infrastructure to manage cost basis and gains.
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