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Coinbase and Cardless Launch Stablecoin-Backed Credit Card: The Logic of Trading Crypto for Credit Has Changed

2026-06-10

Coinbase and card issuing technology company Cardless have announced a partnership to launch a credit card backed by stablecoins. According to CoinDesk’s report, the card has a clear target market: users who cannot get approved for a regular unsecured credit card. In other words, this isn’t just another prepaid debit card — it’s a “secured credit card,” where users pledge stablecoins they hold as collateral in exchange for a line of credit. The specific collateral currency (USDC, or USDT support as well), collateralization ratio, credit limit ceiling, and annual fee structure remain to be fully disclosed by Coinbase as of publication. This article does not speculate on undisclosed figures.

This Is Nothing Like the USDT Card in Your Wallet

Let’s separate the concepts first, since this directly determines whether it’s useful to you.

Most crypto cards on the market — including Coinbase Card, the Asia Elite variant of MPCard, and Crypto.com Visa — are fundamentally prepaid/debit-style: you spend exactly what you top up or sell in stablecoins. There’s no credit extension involved, and none of it reports to credit bureaus. They solve the problem of “I have ₮ and want to spend it.”

The Coinbase × Cardless card is a secured credit card: you lock up a batch of stablecoins as collateral, and the issuer grants you a revolving credit line based on that. It solves a different problem: “I have ₮, but no US credit history / my FICO score isn’t high enough, and I want to build credit.” The two models differ in key ways:

A practical read for USDT card users: if you came to usdtcard.net looking for a tool to “spend crypto without exposing identity and without building credit history,” this card basically doesn’t belong on your shortlist — you’re better off sticking with Coinbase Card or an Asia-route option like MPCard. But if you’re based in the US and struggling to build a credit history, this could be a new option worth tracking over the next 30 days. Nothing about your existing card will change within 7 days; official applications and concrete terms likely won’t materialize for up to 90 days.

Historical Context: Secured Crypto Cards Aren’t a New Story, But the Backdrop Is Different This Time

The narrative of “pledge crypto for credit” in the crypto space traces back at least to the BlockFi credit card of 2020–2021 — a cashback-style Visa card that marketed crypto rewards as its selling point. But after BlockFi filed for bankruptcy protection in 2022, its card products were discontinued as well (specific liquidation details are subject to court filings). The lesson from that round was clear: no matter how novel the issuing logic, it all collapses if the issuer’s own solvency can’t hold up.

One important distinction to make: Coinbase’s own debit card product (Coinbase Card) launched in the European market earlier than in the US — it’s not accurate to say it “only started in 2021.” Rollout timing varies by region, and this piece won’t make sweeping timeline claims.

There are two major differences from the BlockFi era:

  1. The collateral is stablecoins, not volatile assets. BlockFi-era products often involved volatile assets like BTC/ETH as collateral, where a price crash could trigger margin calls. Stablecoin collateral theoretically eliminates that price risk — provided the pledged stablecoin itself doesn’t depeg.
  2. The regulatory environment has completely changed. 2021 was a regulatory vacuum; by 2026, the US has the early framework of stablecoin-specific legislation in place, giving issuers a clearer compliance line to work within when designing secured credit cards.

The similarity is also clear: the period during which users can’t access their liquidity remains a real cost, whether the collateral is BTC or USDC.

The Compliance Boundary: What Line Does a Secured Credit Card Sit On

This is technically an integration-category news item, but it naturally carries regulatory implications. Secured credit cards are a mature, legal category of financial product in the US (traditional banks have long offered secured cards); using stablecoins as collateral doesn’t raise the question of “can this be issued at all” — the real difficulty lies in how the pledged stablecoins are custodied and how they get liquidated in the event of default. This depends on how Coinbase and Cardless design the compliance structure, and remains pending official disclosure.

For non-US users, this card is unlikely to open up in the near term. If you’re in Asia-Pacific or the EU, rather than waiting on a US credit card you may never be able to use, it’s more productive to nail down which locally usable cards work for you — EU users can check the EU Compliance Guide, and Hong Kong users can check the Hong Kong Compliance Guide. The card choices on those pages have more direct bearing on your actual usability than this news item does.

To be clear about the boundary: in the US, secured credit cards are an explicitly permitted product category; using stablecoins as collateral is a new, specific implementation of that concept, and the custody and liquidation details sit in a gray zone yet to be finalized. This does not constitute a “prohibition,” but there isn’t yet a mature precedent either.

Key Milestones Worth Watching

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We will update this news item with details once the official terms are disclosed.