Why Crypto Cards Are Quadrupling in Volume (Even in a Soft Market)

18-Jun-2026 Medium » Coinmonks

According to recent data from Cryptopolitan, cumulative crypto card spending volume is on the absolute verge of crossing a historic milestone, currently sitting at $9.898 billion.

To put this into perspective: just one year ago, that cumulative figure was a mere $2.34 billion. That represents a staggering 323% year-over-year explosion. Just last month, monthly volumes hit an all-time record of $866.1 million.

What is driving this massive wave of adoption when the rest of the market is cooling down? The answer lies in a shift from speculative narratives to tangible, everyday utility — and a highly lucrative perks war among issuers.

A Structural Shift in the Issuer Landscape

A year ago, the crypto card space looked like a monopoly. RedotPay dominated the sector with an overwhelming 93% market share. Today, while RedotPay remains the market leader at roughly 61%, the ecosystem has matured into a competitive field.

New challengers have carved out substantial market share over the last 12 months: KAST now commands 15% of cumulative volume, EtherFi has quickly captured 11%.

This diversification proves that the market isn’t just growing; it is decentralizing. Consumers now have options, and competition is forcing issuers to innovate.

Why Spending Persists in a Bearish Market

Historically, onchain activity and crypto spending closely tracked speculation cycles. When prices dropped, people stopped spending. This time, the trend has broken. Users are increasingly leveraging dollar-denominated stablecoins to fund their daily lives, regardless of whether the market is green or red.

Three core catalysts are driving this sustained volume:

  • Emerging market demand: in regions facing high inflation or unstable local currencies, stablecoins tied to Visa and Mastercard rails solve critical banking limitations.
  • Regulatory clarity: legislation like the GENIUS Act has provided a proper, formalized framework for issuers, moving crypto cards out of the regulatory gray zone and into mainstream compliance.
  • Frictionless integration: legacy payment rails mean merchant integration is seamless. Merchants receive local fiat, while users spend their crypto balances instantly at checkout.

Modern users aren’t just looking for convenience; they want their spending to work for them.

Major crypto platforms are capitalizing on this by offering perks that traditional financial institutions cannot match:

  • Bybit Card, for example, is accepted at over 90 million merchants globally via standard payment networks. If a storefront takes standard debit cards, they take a crypto card.
  • WhiteBIT Card offers up to 10% cashback in BTC or WBT on various spending categories.

In the traditional banking world, 1–2% fiat cashback is standard. In the crypto ecosystem, a 10% cashback reward paid out in blue-chip crypto assets effectively turns everyday expenses — like groceries, gas, or dining — into an automated, dollar-cost-averaging (DCA) crypto investment strategy. Spending money literally becomes a way to build your portfolio back up.

The $10 Billion Floor

It is worth noting that the $9.898 billion figure is likely a conservative estimate. Cards issued by major centralized exchanges often settle transactions internally on private ledgers, meaning a massive portion of global crypto card volume is completely invisible to onchain tracking tools.

Crossing the $10 billion mark is not a peak; it is a baseline. As traditional banks continue to offer negligible interest rates and standard rewards, the integration of high-yield perks and global payment rails ensures that crypto cards will continue to transition from a niche Web3 flex to an everyday financial staple.


Why Crypto Cards Are Quadrupling in Volume (Even in a Soft Market) was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

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