Revolut just handed Dogecoin its most mainstream moment in years. The move gives Dogecoin something it has often struggled to hold for long periods, which is a real-world payment story that extends beyond social media hype. However, this is yet to translate into bullish price action for Dogecoin, which is still trading close to the $0.10 region.
Revolut Brings Dogecoin Back Into The Payments Conversation
Dogecoin has found its way back into the adoption conversation after Revolut launched a physical DOGE-themed crypto debit card across the UK and most of the European Economic Area.
The card was described by the fintech company as its first physical crypto debit card, featuring a Dogecoin design and an LED display that lights up when users make contactless payments. The rollout is initially available in the UK and most EEA markets, although Hungary, Switzerland, and Portugal are excluded from the first phase.
The card can be used anywhere Visa and Mastercard are accepted, which is where Dogecoin’s adoption for payments comes into play. Users link the card directly to their Dogecoin holdings within the app, and when a purchase is made, the platform automatically converts the required amount of DOGE into the local currency at real-time exchange rates, with no additional conversion fees applied at the point of sale. However, this creates a condition where merchants receive local currency instead of DOGE.
Revolut serves over 70 million users globally and has been pushing into the crypto industry. Revolut is also deepening its regulatory standing, and the company recently received its full UK banking license in March 2026.
Why DOGE Price Is Still Struggling
The adoption of Dogecoin exists in parallel to suppressed price action. Revolut’s card is the most visible element of a change that the DOGE price chart has largely ignored.
At the time of writing, Dogecoin is trading at $0.106, down approximately 8.5% from $0.115 recorded just last week. A more immediate factor for the most recent decline came on May 18, when geopolitical tension caused by a US presidential warning to Iran led to a move that sent Bitcoin below $77,000 and pulled the broader crypto market lower, with Dogecoin among the casualties.
The problem for Dogecoin is that adoption headlines do not always create immediate buying pressure. The longer-term picture is more revealing. Dogecoin hit $0.48 in December 2024 and $0.29 in September 2025, and has since fallen back to the $0.109 to $0.115 range in the past two months, a drawdown of about 75% from its cycle peak, with no convincing recovery in sight.
Spot Dogecoin ETFs have also not done much to help, with the early excitement around the products failing to translate into buying pressure for the meme coin. The ETFs were expected to give institutional and traditional market investors easier exposure to Dogecoin, but inflows have been modest compared to other crypto ETF products. At the time of writing, Spot Dogecoin ETFs have only attracted $11.78 million in total net inflow since launch.














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