While some consumers have lauded the change, others have stated that payments over the phone or online are much simpler.
It is believed that this provides the customers with an additional layer of security. Since then, Chase has been providing the current account holders with a numberless debit card which has become a huge hit in the UK. The company’s investors were provided these cards that did not have the numbers on them. Now, with the personal information and numbers printed on the back of the card, it is now more typical to have a rather plain and uncluttered front or even an eye-catching image.Ī payment service called Curve, in early 2020 launched the “first numberless cards in Europe”. They were rather utilitarian, with the account holder’s name, a long number, and the “valid from” and “expires end” dates, and carried the short code and account number on the front of the card and the three-digit card security code on the back. Some of them are not even printing them anywhere.įor decades, bank cards had a largely looked uniform. Increasingly, banks are removing information such as the expiry date present on the back of the card and the 16-digit long number on the front. Initially, there was a revolution of contactless transactions, but now debit cards and credit cards are going numberless.