BTC, ETH, USDT, USDC, XMR, SOL, LTC, DOGE, BNB, TON, TRX, NEAR and 20+ more across 30+ networks. Pay from any wallet — the engine converts to whatever the gift-card desk settles in, and you see one fixed quote before sending.
Buy Xbox Gift Cards with Crypto — BTC, ETH, XMR
Buy Xbox gift cards with BTC, ETH, USDT, XMR and 30+ other cryptos. Codes are delivered by email and redeem in the US — on xbox.com, the Microsoft Store, or directly on console — for games, DLC and Game Pass.
What an Xbox gift card actually buys
An Xbox gift card loads credit straight into your Microsoft account balance, so it spends across the Xbox ecosystem and most of Microsoft’s storefront. That covers full game purchases on Xbox Series X|S and Xbox One, downloadable content and battle passes inside Fortnite, Call of Duty, Rocket League and EA Sports FC, plus subscription top-ups for Xbox Game Pass Ultimate and EA Play. Balance also works on Microsoft Store purchases — Windows apps, films and TV rentals — when you sign in with the same account. Redemption is US-region: the code must be applied to a Microsoft account set to the United States.
Why pay for Xbox credit in crypto
The clean reason is finality. Gift codes can’t be charged back, so brands hand them over as soon as your crypto confirms — no 3-day card-network limbo, no risk scoring that flags a new device buying a $100 code at 2am. The privacy reason matters too: a Microsoft account tied to your gamertag, friends list and purchase history doesn’t need your Visa statement attached as well. Pay in BTC, XMR or USDT, get a one-time code by email, redeem on xbox.com or inside the console’s Microsoft Store. The card spends like any other Xbox card after that.
Pay in the crypto you already hold
uSwap routes 30+ networks, so the asset on your ledger or phone wallet is the asset you spend. BTC from cold storage, ETH or USDC from a hardware wallet, XMR from a privacy stack, SOL or BNB from an exchange withdrawal, LTC, DOGE, TON, TRX, NEAR — all map to the same Xbox checkout. Internally the engine converts to whatever the gift-card desk settles in. You see one quote, one address, one confirmation window. No staging swap on a DEX, no bridging to a “supported” token first, no extra signatures from your wallet.
How the 0% fee actually works
Crypto-to-crypto on uSwap is 0% platform fee with no spread baked into the quote — that’s the engine. Gift cards work the same way: there’s no surcharge on the swap leg. The spend side carries a small retail markup that funds the engine, the same way any reseller margin works on Xbox cards bought at a grocery checkout. You’re not paying a “crypto premium” on top — the markup is the only line. That’s why a $50 Xbox card priced in BTC at uSwap costs roughly what a $50 Xbox card priced in USD costs at a corner store.
Delivery, denominations and redemption
Cards are delivered as a 25-character code to the email on your order, usually within minutes of the on-chain confirmation. Denominations follow what Microsoft prints — $10, $15, $25, $50, $100 — and you can buy several in one session to top up to the exact balance a game or annual Game Pass renewal needs. Redeem at xbox.com/redeem, in the Microsoft Store on Windows, or under “Redeem code” in the Xbox dashboard. The code is one-time use, US-region, and lands directly in your Microsoft account balance — no expiry on the balance itself once applied.
What “anything in, anything out” looks like at checkout
You pick the crypto, you pick the denomination, the page shows a fixed quote and a deposit address. Send from any wallet — custodial, hardware, mobile, mixer-output — and the bridge URL is persistent, so the next time you want to top up Game Pass you reuse the same flow from the same device. Real recovery is on the swap engine underneath: if the network fees blow out or the rate drifts past your tolerance, you decide whether to market through, hold, or refund. No support ticket required to get your coins back.