---
title: "BingX Launches Visa Debit Card With Wirex For Digital Assets"
date: 2026-07-10
author: "Kathleen Kinder"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/bingx-launches-visa-debit-card-with-wirex.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Fintech"
    url: "/fintech.md"
tags:
  - name: "News"
    url: "/tag/news.md"
---

# BingX Launches Visa Debit Card With Wirex For Digital Assets

BingX launched the BingX Visa Debit Card on July 10, 2026, partnering with fintech infrastructure provider Wirex to let users spend digital assets through Visa’s global payment network. The card connects to more than 200 countries and territories.

## Key Takeaways

- BingX partnered with Wirex to launch the BingX Visa Debit Card, giving cardholders access to Visa’s network across more than 200 countries and territories.
- Wirex, a global stablecoin infrastructure provider, issues the card using its full-stack Banking-as-a-Service infrastructure and Visa principal membership, according to BingX.
- Eligible BingX Metal Card holders get fee-free ATM withdrawals of up to $200 per month, alongside no issuance or annual fees, per Wirex.
- BingX says it serves over 40 million users worldwide and ranks among the top five global crypto derivatives exchanges.
- The card integrates with Apple Pay and Google Pay for contactless payments, on top of a tiered BingX Card rewards structure for VIP users.

## What Happened?

**BingX**, founded in 2018, describes itself as a leading crypto exchange and Web3 AI company. The partnership marks the start of a long-term collaboration between the two companies, with both firms aiming to let millions of customers spend crypto in daily life and earn rewards on their holdings, reaching the same [Crypto user demographics](https://coinlaw.io/crypto-user-demographics-statistics/) already active on the exchange. The move lands inside a card race that is reshaping exchange market share narratives beyond pure trading volume.

> 1/ A card built for 40 million users is now live. 💳  
>   
> We are proud to be powering [@BingXOfficial](https://x.com/BingXOfficial?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)‘s first [@Visa](https://x.com/Visa?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw) Debit Card, running on our full-stack BaaS platform, connecting one of the world’s largest crypto exchanges to everyday spending. 👇 [pic.twitter.com/Do1X0aekL1](https://t.co/Do1X0aekL1)
> 
> — Wirex (@wirexapp) [July 10, 2026](https://x.com/wirexapp/status/2075550670896423359?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

 ## The License Layer Behind a Crypto-Linked Visa Card

[BingX](https://coinlaw.io/bingx-unveils-powerful-crypto-card-cashback-rewards/) does not issue the card directly. [Visa](https://coinlaw.io/visa-statistics/) reserves direct card issuance rights, known as principal membership, for regulated, bank-grade institutions. So a crypto exchange without a banking charter typically has to route through a program manager that already holds one. Wirex holds that Visa principal membership and supplies the underlying **Banking-as-a-Service infrastructure**, the plumbing that lets BingX offer card issuance without becoming a licensed bank itself.

That dependency is why this reads as a partnership, not a feature release. BingX built a spending product on Wirex’s regulatory footprint, not its own. Wirex Co-Founder and Group CEO Pavel Matveev said the company’s Banking-as-a-Service arm has become the **fastest growing stablecoin infrastructure provider**, calling Wirex one of the few crypto-native platforms with Visa principal membership.

## Card Features and the Gaps Worth Noting

The card pairs payments functionality with **BingX’s tiered rewards structure**, under which early applicants get launch incentives and BingX VIP users unlock additional card benefits and premium tiers. BingX frames the card as carrying no issuance or annual fees, a baseline that applies regardless of tier.

The [fee-free ATM allowance](https://coinlaw.io/atm-usage-decline-statistics/) named in the release is tied specifically to the Metal Card tier, not to every cardholder. BingX has not said what, if any, ATM terms apply below that level.

The announcement also does not name which countries can apply at launch or which digital assets convert into spendable balance. Those gaps matter more for a card than for a trading feature, since spending requires real-time settlement rails and compliance clearance in each market.

## Implications for Crypto Exchanges

BingX’s move mirrors a broader pattern among large platforms, which increasingly compete on real-world spend utility, not only on trading volume or peer market share. Matveev’s framing of Wirex as a fast-growing stablecoin infrastructure provider points to a wider shift, where [stablecoins](https://coinlaw.io/stablecoin-statistics/) function as the settlement layer behind Visa-branded crypto cards rather than just a trading pair.

Routing spend through a Visa principal member also routes it through that member’s compliance stack. KYC checks, fiat off-ramp conversion, and chargeback handling sit with Wirex as the card issuer rather than with BingX as the exchange, a division of labor that shifts consumer-protection exposure toward the regulated partner instead of the trading venue.

## CoinLaw’s Takeaway

This launch reads as a licensing workaround dressed up as a product announcement. BingX gets a Visa-branded spending rail without becoming a bank, and Wirex gets another large exchange running volume through its **[Banking-as-a-Service ](https://coinlaw.io/digital-transformation-in-banking-statistics/)**stack. The card itself is fairly standard; who is allowed to issue it, and why, is the more interesting part.

The bigger signal sits in what the release leaves out. A release naming a rewards tier, a fee-free ATM cap, and a **Visa principal membership** without naming a single supported country or a list of spendable assets is describing an infrastructure deal more than a finished consumer product.