Best crypto cards in Japan
These cards are available to people in Japan. We rank them by our composite score: fees, privacy, trust, community, and rewards.
The top crypto card in Japan right now is Crypto.com Visa (7.8/10). It pays 5% cashback and charges 0 a year.
Updated July 2026
- 1. Crypto.com Visa — 7.8/10
- 2. COCA Card — 7.5/10
- 3. Kast Card — 7.5/10
- 4. Plasma One Card — 7.3/10
- 5. Tria Card — 7.2/10
21 cards found
The Crypto.com Visa Card offers up to 5% CRO cashback, access to airport lounges, and Netflix/Spotify rebates depending on the tier. Stake CRO to upgrade.
COCA is a self-custodial Visa debit card secured by MPC technology, letting users spend stablecoins directly from a wallet they control while holding a Malta-based IBAN in their own name. Cashback scales from 1% up to 8% depending on how many COCA tokens are staked, with the free entry tier capped at a small monthly limit. The virtual card issues instantly for free and a physical card is available for a small one-time fee.
Plasma One is a non-custodial, virtual-only Visa spending card issued by Rain on the Plasma stablecoin chain, holding USD stablecoins that convert at 0% at the point of sale. It runs a tiered model (Lite, Core, Platinum) where Core and Platinum are unlocked by paying a monthly fee or staking XPL, with cashback scaling from 2% up to 4% paid in XPL. FX fees drop from 1% to 0% at higher tiers, and no physical card is available yet as of mid-2026.
Tria is a self-custodial Visa card that spends USDC and USDT directly from a user-controlled wallet across 150+ countries with 0% FX fees. It comes in three tiers (Virtual, Signature, Premium) carrying monthly fees from roughly $2 to $21, and rewards spending with Tria Points worth an effective 1.5% up to 6% cashback. ATM access is available at about $1 plus 1%, with crypto-to-fiat conversion costing around 0.4%.
Wirex is a multi-currency card supporting 40+ currencies including 20+ cryptocurrencies. Earn Cryptoback rewards in WXT on every purchase.
Kolo is a virtual Visa Platinum card (issued by Rain) that you top up with crypto such as USDT, BTC or ETH and spend in 60+ countries, with conversion handled automatically at spend time. Unlike its self-custody peers in this batch it is custodial, so the wallet provider controls access to funds. It pays Bitcoin cashback and a 10 USDC activation deposit that is returned as spendable balance; it is not available in the United States.
Tuyo is a self-custodial virtual Visa card that lets users spend USDC (primarily on Base) directly at Visa merchants while holding their own private keys, backed by a US bank account number. It charges no annual, monthly, issuance or FX fees and advertises an unusually high daily spend limit up to $200,000. Instead of crypto cashback it runs a points program (TUYOs) plus a quirky Buy Now Pay Maybe feature and a referral scheme.
RedotPay is a Visa prepaid crypto card from Hong Kong that you top up with BTC, ETH, USDT, USDC or SOL and spend at over 130 million merchants. Virtual issuance costs $10 and the physical card $100, with no monthly fee.
ZEN.com is an EU-regulated multi-currency Mastercard with a built-in crypto on and off ramp. Hold 28 fiat currencies and 13 cryptocurrencies in one account, spend with 0% FX on the top plan, and earn instant cashback at selected partner merchants (there is no flat cashback on everyday spending).
Lava Card is a virtual Visa card tied to Lava's Bitcoin-backed lending platform, funded by depositing USDC on Solana and earning up to 5% cashback in Bitcoin. The product emphasizes self-custody with on-chain proof-of-reserves and charges no monthly, FX, or conversion fees, and is available in 200-plus countries. There is no physical card and no ATM access as of this review.
Jam is a no-KYC virtual Visa card you open with just an email and top up with USDT, spending up to $250,000 a day from a wallet you control. There's no ID check and no bank, but the convenience costs about 4.2% per conversion.
Based Card is a Visa debit card from Based, a self-custodial app built on the Hyperliquid ecosystem, funded with SOL, USDC, or USDT across Arbitrum, Polygon, and Solana. Cashback ranges from 2% to 4% paid in the BASED token, with higher tiers adding perks such as airport lounge access and streaming credits but requiring a stake of $500 or more to issue a card. Virtual cards are free while physical metal cards cost around $50.
Payy is a non-custodial, virtual-only Visa card built on private stablecoin payment infrastructure, letting users spend USDC and USDT directly from a self-custodied wallet across 230+ countries. It charges no annual or issuance fees, a 1% FX markup and 0% conversion (gas only), with Apple Pay support. Instead of cashback it runs a points program that rewards holding a balance and pays 10,000 points per referral. There is no physical card, IBAN, or ATM access.
KeyOne is a non-custodial virtual Visa you issue inside a Telegram bot and add straight to Apple Pay, topping up with USDT or USDC from a wallet whose keys never leave your device. The free Basic plan charges 0.8% per top-up (0% on the €120/year Premium), and you can spend in 200+ countries.
The Xapo Card is a premium metal debit card bundled with Xapo Bank membership, spending BTC, USD, USDC and USDT with a USD account issued in the holder's name. It stands out for near-frictionless spending: 0% FX, only a ~0.1% BTC/fiat spread, free ATM withdrawals up to $100/month, and Bitcoin cashback of up to 1%, all backed by very high spending limits and 100+ country coverage. The trade-off is the steep annual membership (~$1,000), which makes it a fit for high-balance users rather than casual spenders.
Spritz Finance is a US-based crypto payments app whose Visa card is issued through Pathward and funded directly from a self-custodied wallet in real time. It supports a very broad range of assets across many chains and charges no monthly, issuance or FX fees, with crypto-to-USD conversion advertised from about 0.5% up to roughly 2%. The newer premium tier adds a physical card and up to 5% cashback on travel, dining and hotels. It is available in 140-plus countries.
Tevau is a Hong Kong-licensed crypto spending app offering a USDT-funded card usable anywhere Visa is accepted, with a EUR Mastercard variant also available. Virtual cards issue instantly after KYC, while a physical card costs about 100 USD to order. It is custodial, supports only USDT across Arbitrum, BSC and Tron, and charges roughly a 1% top-up plus a 1.2% FX and 1.9% ATM fee. There is no cashback, but the card reaches 200-plus countries.
Onboard offers USD-denominated virtual prepaid cards funded from stablecoins or local currency and usable wherever Visa is accepted, aimed at cross-border spenders in emerging markets. It supports USDC and USDT across Ethereum, Polygon, BSC and Tron, with a low ~0.35% conversion cost but a 2% plus 0.5 USD fee on non-USD transactions and a small 3 USD issuance fee. A 10 USD welcome bonus and referral rewards are available, and coverage spans 190-plus countries. There is no cashback beyond occasional promotional campaigns.
THORWallet Card is a non-custodial, self-custody Mastercard tied to THORWallet's multichain DeFi wallet, spending stablecoins with no top-up fee and instant on-chain conversion. It comes in tiered plans (Basic, Premium, Swiss Banking) whose FX markups range from 0.5% to 1.5%, with a Swiss IBAN and up to 2% cashback on the Premium tier. Staking the $TITN token unlocks fee rebates, and it is available in 175+ countries including the US. Virtual cards ship on all tiers; physical cards are Premium-only.
The Bitcoin.com V-Card is a prepaid physical card from Bitcoin.com that lets users load and spend several cryptocurrencies, including BTC, ETH, USDT, USDC, and TON, converted to euros. It carries relatively high costs, with a 75 EUR issuance fee, a 1 EUR monthly fee, and 2% charges on both currency conversion and ATM withdrawals, and it offers no cashback. The card supports Apple Pay and is available in 170-plus countries.
Frequently asked questions
Right now Crypto.com Visa ranks #1 for Japan on our composite score. The list re-sorts weekly, so the leader reflects current fees and reviews.