Independent consumer information hub — not affiliated with any gift card issuer

Independent Consumer Information · Not a Balance-Lookup Service

Understanding US Gift Cards — A Plain-Language Guide

ZhaiBaoBao is an independent educational site about how gift cards work in the United States — the federal CARD Act, fee and expiration rules, and the scam patterns shoppers most often run into. This site does not check card balances, sell or activate cards, or process card numbers. For any balance question, use the official website or phone number printed on your own card.

Informational only. We are not affiliated with any retailer, bank, or gift card issuer. Never enter a card number, PIN, or activation code on this site — we don't have a field for one and we don't ask.

Information OnlyWe don't sell or activate any cards.
Based on US LawReferences the federal CARD Act of 2009.
No Account NeededNo signup, no behavioral ad trackers.
What this site covers

Practical answers about US gift cards

Short, plain-language explanations of the things people actually run into — checking a balance, knowing your rights, and avoiding the common scams.

5+years before a card can expire
12months of inactivity before any dormancy fee
1fee per month maximum on an inactive card
Federal law

The CARD Act, in plain terms

The Credit Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure Act of 2009 set baseline rules for most gift cards sold in the US. The numbers above are from that law.

  • Gift cards can't expire for at least five years from purchase or the last load.
  • Dormancy fees are only allowed after 12 straight months of inactivity.
  • No more than one fee per month on an inactive card.
  • Fee terms must be disclosed on the card or packaging before purchase.
Read the full breakdown

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Educational Overview

Recognising Gift Card Scams

Gift cards are a frequent target of consumer fraud. This site is informational only — we don't sell, activate, look up, or process cards. The notes below describe the most common patterns reported to US consumer protection agencies so you can spot them early.

Impersonation callsCaller claims to be a government agency, utility, or tech-support team
  1. Pattern. The caller invents an emergency — an unpaid bill, an arrest warrant, a refund — and instructs the victim to buy gift cards and read the numbers over the phone.
  2. Reality. No legitimate US agency or utility accepts gift cards as payment. Any such request is a scam, regardless of how official the caller sounds.
  3. What to do. Hang up. Verify by calling the agency back using a phone number from their own official website, not a number the caller supplies.

Never read gift card numbers or PINs to anyone over the phone, by text, by email, or in chat.

Prize and lottery scamsYou've won something and need to pay a small fee in gift cards
  1. Pattern. A message claims you've won a prize, a sweepstakes, or an inheritance and that gift cards are needed for taxes, processing, or release of funds.
  2. Reality. Legitimate prizes never require payment in gift cards. Anyone collecting on a real prize uses regulated payment methods and identity verification.
  3. What to do. Stop responding. Report the message to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov.

If payment in gift cards is required to claim something, it is not a real prize.

Rack tamperingCards pre-scratched or repackaged in store displays
  1. Pattern. Criminals copy card numbers and PINs from store racks, reseal the packaging, and wait for shoppers to load value before draining the card.
  2. Inspection. Before purchase, check the packaging for re-glued seals, scratched-off PIN coatings, or misaligned barcodes.
  3. If you suspect tampering, choose a different card and notify the retailer's staff.

Buy from the front of the rack rather than the back, and keep your purchase receipt as proof of the load.

For genuine questions about a card you own, contact the issuer using the website or phone number printed on the back of that card. ZhaiBaoBao has no access to any issuer's system and cannot check balances, reissue cards, or recover funds.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Under the federal CARD Act, most gift cards sold to consumers cannot expire for at least five years from the purchase date or the last time value was loaded onto the card. Some products — reloadable prepaid cards and certain promotional cards — may operate under different rules. Always check the terms printed on the card or packaging.
A dormancy or inactivity fee is a monthly charge that reduces your card's balance when the card has not been used. Federal law allows these fees only after 12 consecutive months of inactivity, limits them to one per month, and requires clear disclosure of fee terms before purchase. Some states add stricter protections.
Contact the card issuer as soon as possible. Many issuers can place a hold on the remaining balance if you have the original receipt or card number. Policies vary significantly by issuer, so act quickly and keep documentation.
If anyone — caller, texter, emailer, or "government agency" — asks you to pay using gift cards and read back the numbers, that is a scam. Legitimate agencies and businesses do not accept gift cards as payment. Inspect packaging before purchase for signs of tampering.
A store (closed-loop) card can only be used at the retailer that issued it. A prepaid open-loop card carries a major network logo and can be used anywhere that network is accepted. Open-loop cards often have additional fees and slightly different rules.
Most major retailers allow it, but the checkout flow varies. Check your balance first, then look for a split payment option on the payment page. If it isn't obvious, contact the retailer's customer service before placing the order.