this post was submitted on 15 Jul 2024
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Privacy
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Not really the same thing, but Revolut has disposable virtual cards that you can use (but it's a full-fledged bank).
Some apps like MBWay in Portugal also allow you to create these virtual cards, but it requires a Portuguese bank account.
Most online places are now aware of Revolut's disposable CC numbers and reject them. They haven't worked for at least a year now. They're basically useless.
Edit: I should clarify: all CC payments nowadays use tokenization. The website doesn't get the CC details, they get a token issued by your bank. The token can be one-time use, or recurrent. Naturally, for one-time cards Revolut issues one-time tokens. The problem is that many websites have caught up to it and require indefinitely-valid, recurrent tokens for any payment. I don't think this is something that Revolut can solve on their side.
What a bummer, I used the disposable CCs with revolution a decade ago and was thinking of going back to it...no point if they're not usable anymore.though.
What I use for such sites is a frozen card which I only unfreeze after setting a limit for my exact purchase amount. Pay, freeze again for the next time.
My bank will assign cards to specific accounts and only draw payments with that card from that account. And they let you make multiple cards and multiple accounts, naturally.
So for me the easy solution is to simply not keep money in that account (because it's a debit account and will simply refuse payments when there's no money).
The other simple solution is the fact that the bank also lists the tokens currently associated with each card, and lets you remove them. Once the token is gone the website has to ask for explicit permission again.
For those not familiar, nowadays websites can no longer store actual CC details (it's a huge compliance violation) and in fact they never even get to see the CC details anymore. You enter the CC details on the processor's page (which is a separate entity), they send them to your bank, the bank verifies them, asks for a 2FA confirmation from you, and if everything checks out they issue a token to the website.
The token can be good for a one time payment, or for recurring payments. If it's a recurring token my bank will list it next to the card involved and let me revoke it. The website can use the token for as long as it's still listed – if I delete it they have to ask for a new one.
I suspect that this is the main shortcoming of Revolut's one-time cards, they issue one-time tokens (naturally) and it's easy for the website to see that it's not a recurring one.
Edit: I should also mention that in the EU this token mechanism is NOT used for utilities. For utilities (and for other EU recurring payments) there's a similar but explicitly separate mechanism called SEPA. It's similar in the sense you can set up the payments and you see them listed next to your account, you can revoke them at any time, they also use a tokenization system, but they draw directly from an account, there's no CC involved and no CC processors, it's a system that works directly between EU banks.