How big is the virtual card market?

Start with the figure that is best supported. Juniper Research forecasts that the global value of virtual card transactions will climb from $5.2 trillion in 2025 to $17.4 trillion in 2029 — a 235% increase over four years, meaning transaction value more than triples (about a 3.3x rise). That figure, published by Juniper in 2025, is the best-supported headline number available for the size and trajectory of virtual card usage.

$5.2T
Estimated transaction value, 2025 (Juniper Research)
$17.4T
Forecast transaction value by 2029 (Juniper Research)
+235%
Forecast growth in transaction value, 2025–2029

One word in that statistic does most of the work: transaction value. It measures the dollars flowing across virtual cards, not the revenue providers earn from them. That distinction is the reason the next section exists.

Why the market-size estimates disagree

If you search for the size of the virtual card market, you will find numbers that look impossible to reconcile — some in the tens of billions of dollars, others in the tens of trillions. They are not contradicting each other so much as measuring two different things.

  • Transaction value — the total spend processed on virtual cards, reported in trillions of dollars.
  • Market revenue — the income card issuers and platforms earn from that activity, reported in billions of dollars.

Different base years, regional scopes, and forecast horizons widen the gap further. Here is how several published estimates line up. Treat every row except the verified Juniper figures as a vendor estimate: useful for direction, not a settled fact.

SourceFigureWhat it measures
Juniper Research$5.2T (2025) → $17.4T (2029)Transaction value (verified)
Grand View Research~$19B (2024) → ~$60B (2030)Market revenue (estimate)
Allied Market Research~$415B (2023) → ~$2.4T (2032)Transaction / total market value (estimate)

Only the Juniper Research transaction-value figures cleared independent verification for this article (verified June 2026). The remaining rows are publisher estimates that we could not independently corroborate; they use differing metrics, base years, and scopes, and several conflict with one another. We include them to show the range, not to endorse any single number. Sources: Juniper Research, Grand View Research, Allied Market Research.

The practical lesson for anyone researching this space: read the metric and the year before you quote the number. A "$60 billion market" and a "$17 trillion market" can both be correct in the same week because they are answering different questions.

What is driving the growth

Juniper Research names one driver above the rest: the subscription economy. As recurring billing spreads across both business and consumer payments, demand grows for a payment method that can be issued per vendor, capped to a plan, and switched off cleanly — which is exactly what a virtual card is. Beyond that headline, a few structural shifts show up repeatedly across industry commentary:

  • Recurring and subscription billing. One card per service, capped at the plan price, makes recurring spend predictable and easy to stop.
  • Moving B2B spend off checks and manual rails. Card payments carry richer data and clearer controls than a paper check or a one-off transfer.
  • Expense automation and reconciliation. A distinct card per vendor, project, or employee turns reconciliation into a sorting exercise instead of a receipt hunt.
  • Built-in security controls. Spending limits, merchant restrictions, and on-demand cancellation reduce the damage a single exposed number can do.

For the mechanics behind those benefits, see what a virtual card is and how it works and how virtual cards protect your money.

B2B is the center of gravity

Across the research, business spend — not consumer spend — is consistently described as the largest and fastest-moving share of virtual card value. The exact percentage varies by source and should be read as an estimate rather than a fixed figure, but the direction is steady: most virtual card value is commercial, not consumer.

The reason is straightforward: a business issues many payments to many vendors, and each one benefits from its own limit, its own label, and its own audit trail. That is the same logic behind using virtual cards for business payments and for paying vendors — a card per supplier keeps spend capped and reconciled without exposing one shared account number.

The regional picture

Industry estimates generally place North America as the largest virtual card market today, with mature card networks and heavy commercial-card use, while Asia-Pacific is usually flagged as the fastest-growing region as digital payments expand. Europe sits in between, supported by strong card infrastructure and open-banking momentum. These regional splits come from individual research firms and were not independently verified for this article, so treat them as directional rather than precise.

What the data means for your business

You do not need to pick the "right" market-size number to act on the trend. The signal underneath every estimate is the same: virtual cards are moving from a niche tool to a default way that businesses pay online, and the value is concentrated in B2B spend.

That points to a few practical moves:

  • Put recurring spend on its own cards. One virtual card per subscription, capped at the plan price, so a price hike or a forgotten renewal cannot quietly overcharge you.
  • Give each vendor a dedicated card. Capped and labeled, so reconciliation is automatic and a leaked number affects one relationship, not your whole account.
  • Separate spend by team or project. Each card tells its own story, which is what makes the reporting in this market so much cleaner than shared-card spend.

That is the workflow Virtual Card Maker is built for: create a virtual Visa card, set a limit, use it wherever Visa is accepted online, and cancel it from your dashboard when the job is done.

People also ask

How big is the virtual card market?

It depends on what you measure. Juniper Research forecasts global virtual card transaction value rising from $5.2 trillion in 2025 to $17.4 trillion in 2029, a 235% increase. Other firms estimate market revenue instead, which is measured in billions of dollars, so figures vary widely. Always read the metric before the number.

Is the virtual card market growing?

Yes. Juniper Research projects a 235% rise in virtual card transaction value between 2025 and 2029, led by growth in the subscription economy across both B2B and consumer payments.

Why do virtual card market size figures differ so much?

Because research firms measure different things. Some report transaction value (the dollars flowing across virtual cards, in trillions); others report market revenue (the income earned by providers, in billions). Different scopes, base years, and methods also move the numbers. Check the metric and the source year before comparing.

What is driving virtual card adoption?

The subscription and recurring-payment economy is the leading driver named by Juniper Research. Businesses are also moving spend off checks and manual processes toward card rails for better control, automation, and reconciliation.

Who uses virtual cards the most?

Business (B2B and commercial) spend is widely described by research firms as the largest share of virtual card value, though the exact percentage varies by firm and is best treated as an estimate.