Prepaid Cards Are a Smart Way to Pay With Plastic

If a $100 bill had a love child with a credit card, their progeny could very well be a prepaid card—a money tool that combines the ease and versatility of plastic with the freedom from fees of cash.

Not that long ago, prepaid cards were a fee-laden payment method of last resort for people without credit cards or bank accounts. In fact, in 2010, we did not recommend them because of their high fees and inadequate consumer protections. But now, thanks in part to advocacy work by Consumer Reports and other consumer groups, many of the cards have affordable fees (or none at all) and voluntarily offer the same consumer protections as debit cards, including Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. coverage on balances and no liability if they’re lost or stolen.

In simplest terms, a prepaid card is like a debit card that is not tied to your bank account: You preload it with funds and add more as needed. You can purchase one for a few dollars in most supermarkets and drugstores and at many retailers, and begin using it as soon as you give a cashier the amount of money you want loaded onto it. (You should also register the card online or by phone, in case it’s lost.) They can also be purchased online.

You can use the cards anywhere credit or debit cards are accepted. More than 12 million merchants accept prepaid cards with the Master­Card or Visa logo; 3.4 million take American Express-brand cards. The Bluebird and Green Dot cards provide fee-free cash withdrawals at more than 24,000 MoneyPass ATMs, and Liquid cards allow no-fee withdrawals at 15,500 Chase ATMs.

You generally can’t spend more than you’ve put on the card, but if you do, there is usually no overdraft fee. (None of our top-rated cards charge that penalty.) Prepaid cards will also help you to:

Stick to a budget. To impose some fiscal discipline on yourself, open separate card accounts for various categories of expenses, such as groceries, clothing, and holiday gifts, each loaded with the amount you budget for that category. (You can monitor your spending online or with the card’s mobile app.) Look for those that don’t charge a monthly fee (Bluebird and the H&R Block Emerald cards are options).

Do away with debt. Prepaid cards don’t provide credit, so they keep you from spending money you don’t have.

Control kids’ spending. Parents can give teens or college students prepaid cards instead of credit or debit cards to keep them from breaking the bank. If they lose the card, you’re exposed to less risk because it’s not tied to your bank account. The Bluebird and American Express Serve cards allow the primary cardholder to create up to four subaccounts—each of which gets its own card and balance—at no extra cost.