Prepaid cards in Australia work similarly to debit or credit cards, but with key differences that make them ideal for controlled spending, gifting, and incentive programs. Here’s a detailed breakdown of how they work:
What Is a Prepaid Card?
A prepaid card is a payment card that has a fixed amount of money loaded onto it before you can use it. You can only spend the available balance — no credit or overdraft is involved.
Prepaid cards in Australia are typically either:
-
Single-load gift cards (e.g. Visa or EFTPOS gift cards)
-
Reloadable prepaid cards (e.g. for travel, wages, loyalty rewards)
- Physical or Digital cards (digital prepaid cards are usually stored in mobile wallets)
How Prepaid Cards Work
1. Card Issuance
-
Cards are issued by licensed providers (e.g. iGoDirect, banks).
-
Can be physical (plastic) or virtual/digital.
-
Typically branded by a network (Visa, Mastercard, EFTPOS).
2. Loading Funds
-
Single-use/gift cards: loaded once with a fixed amount.
-
Reloadable cards: can be topped up via:
-
Bank transfer
-
BPAY
-
Linked credit/debit card
-
Employer/partner integrations. For example, True Rewards allow businesses to top up cards for their cardholders via a float.
-
3. Usage
-
Spend online, in-store, or over the phone — just like a debit card.
-
Some cards (such as EFTPOS) are limited to Australian merchants; while Visa cards typically support international use.
-
Digital Visa prepaid cards must be added to digital wallets (Apple Pay, Google Pay) before usage.
4. Tracking & Management
-
Many cards, such as True Rewards Digital Visa cards come with a portal to:
-
Check balance
-
View transactions
-
Manage reloads
-
Freeze or cancel the card
-
Use Cases in Australia
-
Gifting: Visa/Mastercard or EFTPOS gift cards
-
Corporate incentives: employee and trade customer rewards and incentives
-
Corporate expense management: travel expenses, petty cash management
-
Travel: Multi-currency prepaid travel cards (e.g. Wise)
-
Loyalty & rewards programs: Reloadable cards linked to user accounts
-
Disbursements: Payouts for research participants, competition winners, customer rebates etc.
-
Youth/budgeting: Tools for teens or those managing fixed spending
Advantages
-
Safer than carrying cash
-
Widely accepted payment option
-
Easy to distribute at scale (digitally or physically)
-
Great for controlled spend and one-off payments
Things to Watch For
-
Some cards have fees (e.g., issuance, inactivity, reload)
-
Not all cards are reloadable
-
Cards typically have an expiry date (check physical card or card portal)
-
Digital prepaid cards may not work in-store unless added to a mobile wallet

