Digital banks have mastered the art of the user experience, but many are hitting a ceiling with traditional revenue models. Razor-thin interchange margins and the volatility of deposit-based lending are squeezing profitability across the sector.
While most digital banks already offer standard debit or credit cards, the market has reached saturation. To break through the noise and unlock sustainable growth, forward-thinking institutions are looking toward a new frontier: crypto card programs.
Integrating cryptocurrency is no longer niche play for tech enthusiasts anymore. It is a strategic move to diversify income streams beyond the limitations of fiat. By bridging the gap between traditional banking and the digital asset economy, banks can tap into new fee structures, higher engagement, and a younger, wealthier demographic.
Why Fiat-Only Models Are No Longer Enough
For years, digital banks relied on a simple formula: acquire users cheaply, offer a slick app, and monetize via interchange fees. But this model faces mounting pressure.
According to recent industry data, many digital banks struggle to achieve a return on equity (ROE) above 4%. Reliance on interchange fees—often capped by regulation—means banks require massive transaction volumes to achieve profitability. In addition, deposit-driven models remain vulnerable to interest rate cycles; when rates fall, net interest margins (NIM) compress.
Digital banks need a differentiator that does more than just facilitate spending. They need a value proposition that encourages holding, trading, and active participation in a financial ecosystem. This is where crypto card programs excel. They don’t replace fiat programs; they supercharge them.
The Unique Revenue Engines of Crypto Cards
Crypto cards operate similarly to traditional debit or credit cards at the point of sale, but the backend economics offer several additional layers of monetization.
1. Crypto-to-Fiat Conversion Fees
The most direct revenue stream comes from the bridge between assets. When a user spends crypto at a merchant (e.g., buying coffee with Bitcoin), the asset must be liquidated into fiat instantly.
Banks can capture a spread or a flat fee on this conversion. Unlike occasional foreign exchange (FX) fees, crypto-active users trigger these conversion events daily, allowing even a small spread (0.5% to 1%) to compound into significant revenue.
- Staking and Yield Generation
This mechanism is unique to the digital asset space. Crypto card programs often require users to “stake” (lock up) a certain amount of the platform’s native token or a stablecoin to access premium card tiers.
This benefits the bank in two ways:
- Asset Under Management (AUM) Growth: Staking increases the total assets held on the platform, improving liquidity.
- Reduced Churn: Users who lock assets for 6-12 months to earn card benefits are far less likely to leave for a competitor. This stability allows banks to better predict revenue and reduce customer acquisition costs over time.
3. On/Off-Ramp Fees
Crypto users move money frequently between wallets and exchanges. Digital banks can monetize the “on-ramps” (fiat-to-crypto) and “off-ramps” (crypto-to-fiat). By facilitating these movements within a closed loop ecosystem, the bank captures value that would otherwise leak to external exchanges.
4. Token-Funded Rewards Systems
In traditional banking, rewards programs are a cost center. Banks pay for cashback out of their own marketing budgets or interchange revenue.
In crypto card programs, rewards are often paid in the bank’s own token or a partner cryptocurrency. This shifts the dynamic entirely. If the token appreciates in value, the user feels they are receiving a high reward, but the cost basis to the bank remains lower than paying out hard cash. It aligns the incentives of the bank (token utility) with the user (token appreciation).
Strategic Benefits Beyond Fees
Revenue isn’t just about line items on a balance sheet; it’s about the lifetime value (LTV) of the customer. Crypto cards drive engagement metrics that fiat cards struggle to match.
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“Top-of-Wallet” Status
A card that allows instant liquidity for investment gains becomes a primary spending vehicle. This ensures the bank captures the lion’s share of daily interchange fees in addition to crypto-specific spreads.
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24/7 Engagement
Traditional banking apps are checked perhaps once a day or week. Crypto markets never sleep. Users check their portfolios, rewards, and staking yields constantly. This high-frequency engagement opens up massive opportunities for cross-selling other financial products, from loans to insurance.
Real-World Success Models
Several platforms have already proven that this model scales effectively.
- Crypto.com: Their tiered card program is famous for requiring users to stake their native token (CRO) to unlock benefits like Spotify rebates and higher cashback. This staking requirement secured billions in assets and created a loyal, sticky user base.
- Revolut: Originally a travel card, Revolut aggressively integrated crypto trading and spending. This pivot transformed them from a travel companion into a primary financial app for millions of users who wanted easy access to digital assets.
- Wirex: As a dedicated crypto payments platform, Wirex allows users to spend dozens of different cryptocurrencies and earns revenue through a combination of interchange, exchange fees, and subscription models.
How Digital Banks Can Launch Crypto Card Programs
Implementing a crypto card program doesn’t mean building a blockchain from scratch. In 2026, the path to market is now streamlined through specialized infrastructure providers.
- Partner with Crypto-Ready Infrastructure: Utilizing Crypto Card solution providers allows platforms to offload the heavy lifting of navigating complex global regulations and maintaining the rigorous security standards required for digital assets.
- Integrate with Payment Networks: Work with Visa or Mastercard, both of whom have opened their networks to crypto-backed settlement partners.
- Ensure Regulatory Compliance: Leverage partners who offer embedded compliance (Know-Your-Customer/ Anti-Money Laundering KYC/AML) specifically designed for digital assets.
- Start with a Hybrid Model: You don’t need to go “full crypto” immediately. Start by allowing users to buy/sell crypto within the app, then launch a debit card that allows them to spend those balances seamlessly.
Diversify Your Revenue Streams Today
The technology to launch these programs is available today. Banks that embrace this shift won’t just be processing payments; they will be powering the next generation of the digital economy by utilizing solutions that handle complex regulations and institutional security as a standard.
Launch Your Card Program with ChainUp Payment Solutions
Transitioning from a traditional ledger to a crypto-enabled card program requires more than just a gateway, it requires a compliant, end-to-end financial stack. Beyond card issuance, ChainUp provides a comprehensive ecosystem of white-label MPC wallets, trading platforms, and liquidity solutions that form the necessary backbone for any robust crypto card infrastructure.
The ChainUp White Label Crypto Card Solution provides the specialized infrastructure to launch and scale your card offering with confidence:
- Integrated Compliance: Navigate complex global regulations with built-in KYC/AML and licensing support tailored for digital banking.
- White Label Card Solutions: From virtual to physical cards, our white-label solutions allow you to maintain your brand identity while we handle the technical heavy lifting.
- Revenue Optimization: Access tools to manage spreads, transaction fees, and loyalty rewards that turn a simple payment tool into a high-margin product.
Ready to evolve your banking ecosystem? Connect with the ChainUp today to explore how our end-to-end card solution can diversify your revenue and future-proof your platform.