To add a virtual card to Apple Pay or Google Pay, open your Virtual Card Maker dashboard, copy your card number, expiration date, and CVV, then add it to Apple Wallet or Google Wallet the same way you would add any Visa card. Once added, hold your phone near a contactless terminal to pay. Your spend cap and any locks you set on the card stay in effect regardless of how the card is presented.
Most people assume a virtual card only works online. It does not. Any virtual Visa card with a number, expiration date, and CVV can be added to Apple Wallet or Google Wallet for in-store tap-to-pay. This matters for employee cards, contractor cards, or any card you want someone to use at a physical counter without carrying a piece of plastic.
What you need before you start
Check these three things before you open Wallet. They are the only requirements, and each one takes about thirty seconds to confirm.
- Your card details. You need the 16-digit number, the expiration date, and the CVV. Find these on your card's detail page inside your Virtual Card Maker dashboard.
- An NFC-capable phone. iPhone 6 or later supports Apple Pay. Most Android phones made in the last four years support Google Pay. If your phone's settings show a contactless payment option, you are set.
- The card is active. A card that has been cancelled or frozen will not complete the wallet verification step. Check that the card status is active in your dashboard first.
How to add a virtual card to Apple Pay
Tap the plus icon in the top right corner. Select "Credit or Debit Card" and then "Continue."
Type the 16-digit number from your Virtual Card Maker dashboard. You can also hold the card image up to your camera if your bank supports card scanning, but manual entry always works.
Enter the expiration date and CVV exactly as they appear on your card details page.
Your card issuer may send a one-time code by email or text, or ask you to call a number. Enter the code and the card is added to Wallet. If no verification is required, it activates immediately.
Hold your iPhone near any contactless terminal and authenticate with Face ID, Touch ID, or your passcode. The terminal shows a confirmation when the payment goes through.
How to add a virtual card to Google Pay
Tap "Add to Wallet" at the bottom of the screen, then select "Credit or Debit Card."
Type or scan your 16-digit card number. Add the expiration date and CVV on the following screens.
Google Wallet will show the card issuer's terms. Tap accept to continue.
Your issuer may ask you to confirm the card via a code sent to your email or phone. Enter the code to finish.
Unlock your phone and hold it near a contactless terminal. The screen will show a confirmation when the payment is accepted.
Your spend limit applies everywhere the card is used
This is the part that matters for business cards. When you set a spending cap on a virtual card in Virtual Card Maker, that cap applies to every charge on the card, whether it is tapped via phone, entered manually online, or keyed at a counter. The limit does not change when the card moves into a digital wallet.
The same is true for any locks you have set. A card locked to a specific merchant category will decline out-of-category charges at a contactless terminal just as it would at an online checkout. The card carries its rules with it into the wallet.
| How the card is used | Spend cap applies | Merchant or category lock applies | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apple Pay tap-to-pay | Yes | Yes, where supported | Same auth as a card swipe; terminal must support NFC |
| Google Pay tap-to-pay | Yes | Yes, where supported | Works at any Google Pay-compatible contactless terminal |
| Online checkout (number typed) | Yes | Yes, where supported | Most common use case for virtual cards |
| Keyed entry at a counter | Yes | Yes, where supported | Use this when no contactless option is available |
What to do when a terminal doesn't take contactless
Some stores, particularly older counters and some government offices, do not have contactless terminals. This does not mean the card stops working. Every virtual Visa card has a 16-digit number, expiration date, and CVV that can be used for:
- Keyed entry at a physical terminal when the cashier enters the number manually
- Phone orders where a vendor takes payment by reading the details over the call
- Online checkout at any site that accepts Visa
The tap-to-pay wallet setup is a convenience layer on top of a fully functional card number. If the terminal cannot read the wallet, fall back to the number. Both routes run through the same spend cap and the same controls.
A frozen or cancelled card will not add to Apple Pay or Google Pay. The verification step requires an active card. If someone tries to add a card you have paused or cancelled, it will fail at the issuer verification step. Check the card's status in your dashboard before sending the details to someone else.
A worked example: contractor with a tap-to-pay card
The setup
- Card cap: $600 for one week of material runs
- Category lock: hardware and building materials, where supported
- Card details emailed to the contractor's work address
- Contractor adds the card to Google Wallet on his Android phone
At the counter
- Contractor taps his phone at the hardware store terminal. The $145 charge clears, the cap drops to $455 remaining, and the transaction appears on the dashboard.
- At a second stop, the terminal is older and does not take contactless. Contractor reads the card number to the cashier for a keyed entry. The $88 charge clears the same way.
What the business owner sees
- Both transactions appear under the contractor's card in the dashboard, each timestamped and tagged to the merchant.
- No receipt chase required. The owner knows what was spent, where, and when, before the end of the day.
Is it safe to add a virtual card to Apple Pay or Google Pay?
Yes. Apple Pay and Google Pay use tokenization: when you add a card, the wallet replaces your real card number with a device-specific token. At the terminal, the token is transmitted instead of the actual number. This means even if a terminal is compromised, it captures a token that cannot be used anywhere else, not the real card number.
A virtual card in a digital wallet is actually more protected than one typed into an online form. Online checkout transmits the real number to the merchant's server. A digital wallet tap transmits only the token. For a card you plan to hand to an employee or contractor, adding it to their phone wallet reduces the chance the raw number is intercepted or written down.
For more on virtual card safety in general, see are virtual cards safe.
People also ask
Can I add a virtual card to Apple Pay?
Yes. Open the Wallet app on your iPhone, tap the plus icon, select add a credit or debit card, and enter your virtual Visa card number, expiration date, and CVV. Your issuer may ask you to verify with a one-time code before the card is activated in Wallet.
Can I add a virtual card to Google Pay?
Yes. Open Google Wallet on your Android phone, tap Add to Wallet, choose Credit or Debit Card, and enter your card details. Once added, hold your phone near any contactless terminal to pay.
What happens if a store doesn't accept contactless payment?
Use the 16-digit number, expiration date, and CVV directly at checkout or read them to the cashier. Every virtual Visa card has these details, so it works for keyed entry, phone orders, and any terminal that accepts a standard Visa card number.
Is it safe to add a virtual card to Apple Pay or Google Pay?
Yes. Both wallets replace your real card number with a device token at the point of payment. The actual card number is never transmitted to the terminal, which is safer than typing the number at an online checkout.
Can I add the same virtual card to both Apple Pay and Google Pay?
Yes, where your card program allows it. The card can be added to multiple devices and wallets. Each device stores its own token, and a charge on one device does not affect how the card works on another.
Does adding a card to Apple Pay or Google Pay change the spending limit?
No. The spend cap you set on the card stays in place regardless of how the card is used. A charge that would be declined at a card reader will also be declined at an Apple Pay or Google Pay terminal.






