Revolut has introduced its first physical crypto card, starting with a Dogecoin-themed debit card for customers in the UK and EEA.
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The card links directly to user crypto balances, so customers do not need to convert coins manually before buying something. At checkout, Revolut handles the exchange in real time and sends merchants standard fiat currency.
The Dogecoin card includes an LED display that lights up during payment. Revolut said crypto purchases carry no extra exchange fees, though users still pay based on the live exchange rate at the moment of purchase.
Spending rules include a £100,000 limit per transaction and a cap of 100 exchanges within 24 hours.
Scale gives the product weight. Revolut serves more than 70 million users globally, which gives its crypto card a wider reach than many crypto-native debit products. The UK and EEA rollout comes after Revolut received a full UK banking licence in March 2026 and filed for a US banking charter during the same month.
The US application hints at a wider crypto payments plan. A future US launch would place the card in one of the largest consumer markets, although Revolut has not given a date.
Tax rules remain the main friction point. In many countries, spending crypto counts as a taxable sale. Users may need records for cost basis, gains and losses, especially when using crypto for frequent everyday payments.
Revolut also secured FCA permissions for leveraged investment products, discretionary portfolio management and advisory services, adding the card to a wider product expansion around banking, investing and digital assets.