A two-step path from Bitcoin to an Amazon gift card without exposing identity. Crypto in, virtual card out, gift card purchased — works on Amazon US, UK, DE, JP, FR, and other regional storefronts.
Amazon doesn't accept cryptocurrency directly. The standard route — convert crypto on a KYC'd exchange, transfer to your bank, pay Amazon — defeats the privacy of crypto. The two-step alternative: turn crypto into a virtual card, use the card to buy the Amazon gift card. No KYC anywhere in the chain.
Send Bitcoin, USDT, Monero, or any of 20 supported coins to your account balance.
Either Visa Classic or Mastercard Prepaid. Load amount: the value of the gift card you want, plus a few dollars buffer.
Go to the gift-card section. Pick the amount, the recipient (yourself or someone else), and the delivery method (email).
Card number, expiry, CVV from your dashboard. Billing address: match Amazon's regional storefront (US address for amazon.com, UK address for amazon.co.uk, etc.).
Amazon delivers the gift-card code by email within minutes. Apply it to your Amazon account or send it to the intended recipient.
Generally yes for BINs 491653 and 528410. Some Amazon regional storefronts run stricter fraud checks on the first purchase; if rejected, try a different BIN or a different Amazon storefront.
Yes. Amazon's gift-card flow accepts a recipient email; the gift-card code arrives in that inbox.
Same process, different storefront. Match the billing address country to the storefront for highest success rate.
Deposit ~$103 in BTC (covers our 2% top-up fee → $100.94 credited). Issue card for $100.50 ($1.50 issuance + $99 load — round up to ensure auth coverage). Buy $99 Amazon gift card. Total overhead: ~$4 on $99 of Amazon credit.
Amazon allows prepaid cards. Whether your specific use case (anonymous purchase, regional arbitrage) complies with their terms is a separate question — read their terms.
Top up with Bitcoin, issue a virtual card, buy the gift card. No exchange, no bank, no KYC.