Purchase Prepaid Card
You get a prepaid card from a bank, an e money provider or a retailer.
A quick and comprehensive guide to prepaid cards for new users. Learn how they work, their benefits, fees, and how to choose the right one for your needs.
A prepaid card with a £20
sign-up bonus
T&Cs apply
A prepaid card is a payment card that you load with money in advance and then spend anywhere that accepts that card network, for example Visa or Mastercard. You are not borrowing. You can only spend the money you have preloaded.
Prepaid cards are sometimes called prepaid debit cards, prepaid credit cards, pay as you go cards, pay as you go bank cards, top up cards, pre payment cards, reloadable debit cards or preloaded debit cards. The names vary, but the core idea is the same: you pay first, then spend.
Prepaid cards are popular with people who want tighter control over spending, people who do not have or do not want a traditional current account, parents who want to give controlled spending money to a teenager, travellers who want to load euros or US dollars, and workers who want wages loaded to a card without using a bank.
You get a prepaid card from a bank, an e money provider or a retailer.
You get a prepaid card from a bank, an e money provider or a retailer.
You load money onto the card. You can usually do this by bank transfer, salary payment, debit card load or cash top up.
You spend that balance in shops, online and at ATMs.
When the balance runs out, you top up again
A prepaid card and a debit card feel similar at checkout. You can tap contactless, insert chip and PIN, pay online and withdraw cash. Both can sit in your wallet or phone wallet and both are accepted where their network (Visa or Mastercard) is accepted.
There are important differences:
You can only spend what is on the card, which helps prevent overspending and helps keep to a weekly or monthly budget. Some cards include budgeting tools and savings spaces.
Parents can top up, set controls and view spending. The young person gets independence with safe limits rather than full bank access.
Instead of entering your main debit card everywhere online, you can use a prepaid card or a virtual prepaid card for shopping and subscriptions. If a website is compromised, only the prepaid card balance is exposed.
Travel prepaid cards let you preload popular currencies like euros and US dollars, so you can spend in local currency without carrying lots of cash. Many of these cards let you withdraw cash from overseas ATMs.
Some cards allow wages or benefits to be paid directly to the card. This is valuable for agency workers, temporary staff, those without a traditional bank account, and people who prefer not to be paid in cash or cheques.
A prepaid card creates separation from your main bank statement. You can use it for personal shopping, online dating, adult content and other sensitive categories without those items appearing in your normal current account history.
If you top up the card and give an additional linked card to a trusted person, they can withdraw cash or make essential purchases without you giving them full access to your main bank account.
Yes. A prepaid card can be used online in most places that accept Visa or Mastercard. You enter the long card number, expiry date and the security code on the back, just like you would with a debit or credit card.
Some providers also offer:
This makes prepaid cards useful for one time payments, subscriptions and services you do not fully trust with your main bank card.
Most open loop prepaid cards (Visa or Mastercard branded) can be used internationally in shops, restaurants, hotels and cash machines. Travel and multi currency prepaid cards also let you hold multiple currencies and spend them like a local. You can often withdraw cash at overseas ATMs, sometimes with a free allowance and then a fee.
When you pay abroad, choose to pay in the local currency rather than letting the terminal convert into pounds. This avoids expensive dynamic currency conversion at the till.
Common load and top up methods include:
Some methods are free, such as wage payments or bank transfers. Cash top up in person often has a small fee. Daily and monthly caps apply. After you pass stricter ID and address checks, many providers lift these limits and allow higher balances, higher ATM withdrawals and direct wage payments.
Some prepaid cards charge very little if you mostly spend in shops or online and top up by bank transfer. Others use a monthly plan fee but bundle perks like cashback, travel allowances or free ATM withdrawals. Overdraft does not apply in the same way as a current account. Most prepaid cards will not let you spend more than you have loaded. Some market “overdraft protection,” which usually just means the card declines when there is no balance rather than letting you go negative.
Before signing up for any prepaid card, you should understand every possible cost.
Not every card charges every fee, but you should know what to look for:
Also called an activation fee. This is a one off cost to get or activate the card.
If you lose your card, the issuer can send a new one with your remaining balance moved over, but many will charge a replacement fee.
A recurring service or plan fee. Some cards charge this even if you barely use the card that month.
Some cards charge a small fee on each purchase in shops or online. The fee can vary by merchant type or where you are spending.
If you top up with cash at a Post Office, PayPoint style outlet or retailer, there is often a reload fee. Bank transfer or salary top ups are usually cheaper or free.
Some prepaid cards let you pay bills or make bank style payments from within the account. A small processing fee may apply per payment.
If you do not use the card for a long period (for example six months or twelve months), some issuers deduct an inactivity or dormancy fee from the remaining balance.
Cards that pay cashback or rewards sometimes charge a handling or redemption fee when you withdraw or cash out those earned rewards.
If you decide to close the card before its normal expiry, some providers charge a cancellation or closure fee to process the remaining balance.
Some cards include a free UK ATM allowance or a free overseas ATM allowance and then charge after that. Using an ATM outside the card’s preferred network almost always costs more, especially abroad.
Checking your balance at an ATM can sometimes trigger a small balance enquiry fee. Checking in the app is generally free.
When the card expires, a few providers charge to issue the new physical card even if you still have money on the account.
Some cards use an annual fee instead of a monthly fee, especially cards that last multiple years.
When you spend in a foreign currency or when the transaction is processed outside the UK, the provider may apply a foreign transaction fee. On travel cards this can be lower or waived in supported currencies.
Some issuers charge a small fee when a purchase is declined because you do not have enough balance. That fee is then deducted from your next top up.
Certain cards let you send money to another cardholder (for example a family member or employee). A transfer fee may apply.
Keep this checklist next to you when you review any prepaid card.
Comparing only the monthly fee is not enough. Two cards might both look “cheap,” but one could be quietly charging you for cash loads, ATM withdrawals and foreign spend.
You can only spend what you have loaded. There is no traditional overdraft and no revolving credit balance.
If you cannot or do not want to open a standard bank account, a prepaid card can still let you get paid, shop in store and online, and withdraw cash.
You can keep your main current account card off high risk websites and use a prepaid card instead. Some providers offer disposable virtual cards so your main details are never exposed.
Multi currency cards make it easier to manage holiday spending and ATM use abroad without carrying large amounts of physical cash.
Parents can give teens a controlled spending card with oversight. Employers can pay wages onto cards instead of handing out cash or cheques.
You can only spend what you have loaded. There is no traditional overdraft and no revolving credit balance.
If you cannot or do not want to open a standard bank account, a prepaid card can still let you get paid, shop in store and online, and withdraw cash.
You can keep your main current account card off high risk websites and use a prepaid card instead. Some providers offer disposable virtual cards so your main details are never exposed.
Multi currency cards make it easier to manage holiday spending and ATM use abroad without carrying large amounts of physical cash.
Parents can give teens a controlled spending card with oversight. Employers can pay wages onto cards instead of handing out cash or cheques.
Some cards come with monthly fees, cash top up fees, ATM withdrawal fees, FX mark ups and inactivity fees. You need to read the tariff.
Some cards let you pay bills and receive wages. Others are spend only. If you need full current account features, not all prepaid cards will be enough.
Using a prepaid card does not build your credit history because you are not borrowing and there is no credit agreement.
If the prepaid provider goes offline or freezes the account, access to your spending balance may be delayed until the issue is resolved. You should not treat a prepaid card as your only source of emergency funds
Some cards come with monthly fees, cash top up fees, ATM withdrawal fees, FX mark ups and inactivity fees. You need to read the tariff.
Some cards let you pay bills and receive wages. Others are spend only. If you need full current account features, not all prepaid cards will be enough.
Using a prepaid card does not build your credit history because you are not borrowing and there is no credit agreement.
If the prepaid provider goes offline or freezes the account, access to your spending balance may be delayed until the issue is resolved. You should not treat a prepaid card as your only source of emergency funds
Costs vary by provider. Typical ranges:
You should always check the fee schedule before you apply. Low fees in one area (for example monthly fee) may be offset by higher fees in another area (for example ATM withdrawals or foreign spend).
When comparing prepaid cards, look at:
If you mainly want a travel card, choose one that supports multiple currencies and has predictable overseas ATM fees.
If you mainly want budgeting, choose a card that has spend alerts, pots or savings spaces and simple UK fees.
If you mainly want wages paid in, choose a card that supports direct salary load and gives you account style details for employers.
Modern prepaid cards in the UK are much more secure than older, anonymous gift cards. Security features usually include:
Most UK prepaid cards are issued by authorised and regulated firms. Your money is safeguarded in ring fenced accounts so it is kept separate from the provider’s own funds. This is not the same as normal savings protection, so you should always read how safeguarding works before loading large balances
Found your prepaid card? Not yet? Here are 4 ways Prepaid365 can help you choose and use the right prepaid or travel money card:
Visit our dedicated category pages to explore and compare travel money, everyday use, teen, and business prepaid cards – all in one view, updated regularly with the latest fees, limits, and features.
Head to our Prepaid Card Reviews section for in-depth reviews of leading prepaid and travel cards, including detailed breakdowns of fees, limits, and benefits to help you find the perfect match.
Browse our Prepaid Card Guides to understand how prepaid cards work, how to manage top-ups, fees, and security, and how to get the best value across different card types and currencies.