TrustCard claims that users can “issue a crypto card instantly from Trust Wallet.” After connecting a wallet, users pay a $10 card issuance fee, activate the card, and can then supposedly pay directly with cryptocurrency. The page also emphasizes no need to top up an account, no additional checks, card issuance in 2 minutes, plus access to a dApp browser, DeFi, and asset management features.
Based on the text, the core offering is a wallet-connected crypto card: users control their private keys, while transactions are signed by a security chip associated with Trust Wallet keys, and the platform claims it cannot access user funds. The main payment method appears to be crypto wallet payment. The page mentions Trust Wallet and says users can transfer assets from Binance or Coinbase. For risk controls, it only discloses warnings for high-risk transactions and dangerous dApps. On privacy, it claims not to track personal information, IP addresses, or balances.
Pricing information is extremely limited: the only visible cost is a $10 issuance fee. The page does not disclose transaction fees, FX markups, network fees, monthly fees, limits, refunds, chargebacks, or dispute-handling rules. More importantly, it does not show essential payment-product information such as the legal entity, country of registration, issuing bank, card network, financial licenses, or KYC/AML policies. Its claim of “no additional verification” conflicts with the usual compliance requirements for card issuance and should be treated with caution.
The positives are that the process appears simple, it emphasizes non-custodial use, privacy, and risk warnings, and it clearly states a $10 card issuance fee. The downsides are more significant: the information is highly repetitive, and there is little disclosure about the legal entity or underlying payment infrastructure. It asks users to connect a wallet and make a payment, but offers no verifiable endorsement. This is only suitable for Web3-experienced users who can independently verify contract, domain, and authorization risks as part of further due diligence. It is not suitable for ordinary users to use directly.
Access from China cannot be determined from the page content alone. Given China’s regulatory restrictions on crypto-asset trading and related payment products, Chinese users should not treat this as an everyday payment tool. If similar products need to be researched, users should first compare information from official Trust Wallet channels and compliant crypto card services such as Coinbase Card, Crypto.com Visa Card, and Wirex, while also verifying local availability and compliance requirements.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on onetriptree.org official site.
onetriptree.org is an Unknown Payments provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 2.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach onetriptree.org directly.