Pin Up Deposit Methods by Country: The Full Matrix
Which deposit methods work in your country, and in what order should you try them? This page is the country × method matrix I refresh every month based on my rolling test batch. Rows are countries, columns are methods. Each cell shows availability, minimum in local currency, approximate ETA, and my real-test fee. The last-tested column marks when I last verified that specific cell against a live deposit attempt.
The Matrix (Every Method × Every Country)
| Country | UPI | Pix | Cards | USDT TRC20 | BTC | Skrill | Bank Transfer | Local |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IN India | ✓ ₹300 | ✗ | ✓ ₹800 | ✓ $10 | ✓ $10 | ✓ $10 | ✗ | — |
| BR Brazil | ✗ | ✓ R$ 30 | ✓ R$ 50 | ✓ $10 | ✓ $10 | ✓ $10 | ✗ | — |
| KZ Kazakhstan | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ ₸4,500 | ✓ $10 | ✓ $10 | ✓ $10 | ✓ | Qiwi |
| AZ Azerbaijan | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ 17 AZN | ✓ $10 | ✓ $10 | Limited | ✓ | — |
| UZ Uzbekistan | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ 125k UZS | ✓ $10 | ✓ $10 | Limited | ✓ | Humo |
| RU Russia | ✗ | ✗ | Very limited | ✓ $10 | ✓ $10 | ✗ | ✗ | — |
| BD Bangladesh | ✗ | ✗ | Limited | ✓ $10 | ✓ $10 | ✗ | ✗ | — |
| TR Turkey | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ limited | ✓ $10 | ✓ $10 | Limited | Limited | — |
How to Read the Matrix
Green checkmarks mark the primary recommended method for each country. Plain checkmarks are supported methods. Crosses are not supported. "Limited" means the method works for some users but not all (depending on bank, region, or compliance layer).
Last-Tested Column Explained
I test at least one deposit per method per supported country per month. The "last tested" date shows when I last verified that specific cell with a real deposit attempt. Cells marked without a date were validated via direct cashier inspection but not with a live deposit in the current month.
Priority Routes by User Goal
- Lowest-cost route: UPI in India, Pix in Brazil, USDT TRC20 elsewhere.
- Highest success route: local real-time rails first, then cards, then crypto fallback.
- Largest-capacity route: bank transfer or crypto depending on country restrictions.
India (IN)
Methods Available — UPI, Cards, Crypto, E-Wallets
India is the deepest deposit stack in the Pin Up network. UPI is the primary method with ₹300 minimum and zero fees. Cards work as a backup with 22% decline rate. USDT TRC20 is the preferred crypto for Indian players holding stablecoins. Skrill and Neteller supported but expensive.
Recommended Order — UPI First
UPI → Cards → USDT TRC20 → Skrill/Neteller. Use UPI unless it is specifically failing for you.
What's Missing (No Pix, No Local Bank Transfer)
Pix is Brazilian-only and does not exist in India. IMPS/NEFT (Indian bank transfer rails) are not currently supported by Pin Up. UPI is the only fee-free rail available to Indian players.
Brazil (BR)
Methods Available — Pix, Cards, Crypto, E-Wallets
Pix is the flagship method with R$ 30 minimum and zero fees. Cards work with 19% decline rate (lower than India). USDT TRC20 for crypto. Skrill and Neteller supported.
Recommended Order — Pix First
Pix → Cards → USDT TRC20 → Skrill/Neteller. Pix is the fastest deposit rail in the entire Pin Up network at 12-second end-to-end average. Use it.
Boleto Status (Currently Not Supported)
Boleto (Brazilian bank slip) is not currently supported by Pin Up. Some competing sites offer it, Pin Up does not. Pix is the replacement.
Kazakhstan (KZ)
Methods Available — Cards, Crypto, Qiwi
Kazakh domestic cards work well. Qiwi (a popular local e-wallet) is supported. Crypto for higher amounts. Limited international e-wallet support (Skrill is available but Neteller is spotty).
Recommended Order — Cards First
Local KZT cards are the fastest path in Kazakhstan because there is no fee-free rail equivalent to UPI or Pix. Cards → Qiwi → USDT TRC20.
Azerbaijan (AZ)
Methods Available — Cards, Crypto
International Visa and Mastercard work. Limited Azerbaijani domestic card support. Crypto is the reliable alternative for anything above $1,000.
Recommended Order — Cards First
Cards → USDT TRC20 → BTC. Limited e-wallet and no UPI/Pix equivalents.
Uzbekistan (UZ)
Methods Available — Cards, Crypto, Humo
Humo (the Uzbek domestic card network) is supported alongside international cards. Crypto works. Bank transfer available for larger amounts.
Recommended Order — Humo or Cards
Humo is usually the fastest for Uzbek players because it is the domestic rail. International Visa/MC as backup, USDT TRC20 for larger deposits.
Russia Context
Limited Method Availability
Russian cards have very limited Pin Up support due to sanctions and processor constraints following 2022. Most Russian issuing banks do not successfully process cross-border gambling transactions. Crypto is effectively the only viable deposit method for Russian players, and USDT TRC20 is the recommended rail.
Sanctions and Processor Constraints
Visa and Mastercard suspended Russian card operations in 2022. Mir cards (the Russian domestic network) are not accepted by Pin Up's Western banking partners. This is a regulatory reality, not a Pin Up choice. Crypto remains because blockchain rails are not subject to the same constraints.
Other Countries (Brief)
Pin Up also accepts deposits from Bangladesh, Georgia, Armenia, Turkey (limited cards), Pakistan (limited cards), and a handful of other markets. In most of these countries, crypto is the primary viable method because local rails are either not supported or inconsistent. Check the Pin Up cashier from your IP address to see which methods are offered — the cashier dynamically filters based on your detected country.
Which Countries Are Fully Blocked
Pin Up does not accept deposits from countries where its Curacao license is not honored and local licensing is not in place. This includes most US states, UK without a UK license, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Denmark, and several other EU markets. If you are in a blocked country the Pin Up cashier will refuse to load the deposit screen.
For per-method details, see each method page. For minimum deposits per country, see minimum deposit. For cap planning, see maximum deposit. For failure troubleshooting, see not working decision tree. For monthly change logs, see deposit blog.
