I was headed to the grocery store this morning and my wife asked me to pick up a gift card for my son's anniversary so he and his wife can maybe go out to dinner or something. I looked at a $50 Visa gift card. Printed on the cardboard backer it said "$4.95 activation fee." Needless to say, I did not buy it. I'll just give my son and his wife cash or write them a check.
I've never bought a gift card before, so perhaps I'm marveling over something that is old news to everyone else. But think about it for a moment. They charge the purchaser of the card 10% of the face value. Then, when the card gets used, they also charge the merchant another 2-3% to run the card. So you're giving THEM a short term loan, and THEY get to charge 12-13% interest on it! And that's not an APR, that's 13% over the term of the loan, which likely isn't going to be more than a few weeks or months.
Nice work if you can get it. Is there any legitimate reason why anyone would buy one of these cards? The only thing I can think of is criminal activity that needs untraceable funds.
I can think of a few.
(1) Enablers who want an arm's length distance from the people they enable
(2) Identity theft victims who have credit so bad they can't obtain any kind of credit card or bank account but still need to use "cashless" activities such as toll roads
(3) People who do not wish to be traced or tracked if they use the card for toll roads and other "cashless" activities
(4) People who want to limit how much a robber or skimmer can take from them, if the grocery store or gas station they use skims their account information and starts making false charges
(5) People who are in the country illegally due to having been brought there by their parents as children, and who therefore cannot obtain a bank account or card
(6) People who are fleeing an abusive ex who is capable of tracking them down through bank card, phone, or credit card use (law enforcement exes often do this)
(7) People who have recently been a victim of a crime or similar disaster and who don't have identification so they can't access their usual accounts
(8) People who lose their ID while traveling, or whose ID is stolen
(9) People who are buying an obligatory gift for someone they don't know very well
None of the people I describe are criminals. Most have been the victim of a crime, or are trying to avoid becoming victims.