Buy $200 Worth of Any Cryptocurrency with Card, Get Bonus 20 USDT (~A$31.74) (Limit 1,000 Claims) @ OKX (Activation Required)

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Limited Offer: Buy Crypto with Your Card & Get 20 USDT!

How to Participate
During the Campaign Period:

  1. Click 'Join now' on the Campaign page to join the campaign.

  2. Purchase AU$200 or more in crypto with your card in a single transaction and keep it in your OKX account for at least 24 hours. Fees apply.

  3. Receive 20 USDT reward (worth AUD31.74)

Campaign ends 29 April 2025, or while rewards last. Limited to the first 1,000 customers. Card purchases are only available on the OKX app. Some banks may treat crypto purchases as a cash advance, which may incur additional fees and interest charges. Participants should check with their bank before making a transaction.

I purchased AU$200 worth of BTC with my debit mastercard. The fee charged by OKX was $3 for me. Avoid using a credit card as this would incur cash advance fee.

Step 1 or 2 of the Campaign task completed within minutes. I am expecting the 20 USDT to be credited after 24 hours. Don't forget to join the campaign before buying otherwise it won't count.

I have made over $1,600 from OKX since last year with these promos. Money in my bank fast via PayID/OSKO.

Use the referral links below if you are new to OKX to get another $20. Easy $50+ profit from $200.

Referral Links

Referral: random (289)

Referrer and referee each receive A$20 after referee trades minimum $100 in crypto. Must switch to AU on top banner to see referral offer.

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Comments

  • -5

    Crypto is a scam.

    • -5

      P.S. No need to argue, prove me wrong.
      Find me a purpose for "cryptocurrency".

      • -1
        1. Digital Money – Used to buy goods and services online.

        2. Investment – People buy crypto hoping its value will increase over time.

        3. Fast Transactions – Enables quick money transfers worldwide.

        4. Decentralisation – No banks or governments control it. Allows transfer of wealth into and out of authoritarian states.

        5. Privacy – Can provide anonymous transactions.

        6. Low Fees – Reduces transaction costs compared to banks.

        7. Smart Contracts – Automates digital agreements (sales, borrowing) without middlemen or a centralised party.

        8. Borderless Payments – Works internationally without currency exchange.

        9. Ownership Control – You fully own and control your digital assets.

        10. Blockchain data - stores information or transactions permanently on the blockchain.

        • -5

          What goods and services online? Drugs on the darkweb?
          Investment? It's a scam.
          Fast?! Bitcoin is not fast. Any other coin is a sh*tcoin.
          Decentralisation means that if someone steals your coins or you lose your private key that your coins are gone forever.
          Privacy? For what? Who knows what you've bought? And who cares?
          Low fees? lol I pay $0 to transfer money, if you pay $0.01 to transfer then you are getting ripped off - that's on you.
          Smart contracts… no one uses them for real practical purposes.
          Borderless payments - Go talk to AUSTRAC about that one
          Ownership? You own cash that you hold. Or gold for that matter. Not an issue anywhere.
          Blockchain data? I thought you said privacy was a point?

          • +5

            @Jowey: Oh yeah, I purchased my groceries with my gold just the other day…

            • +1

              @electricslapper: They have places in shopping centres that buy your gold for cash, which could then be used to buy your groceries.
              That's because gold actually has value and crypto is a scam.

              • +2

                @Jowey: What an efficient and convenient way to purchase groceries.
                How is it a scam, by the way? You keep calling it that but not providing a reasoning for it.

          • +5

            @Jowey:

            You own cash that you hold.

            lol. you have a lot to learn

          • +2

            @Jowey: Proton's services, Mullvad's services. Thats just two that I use, but there are many, many more.

            Claiming all cryptocurrencies is a scam is a bit silly - and I think you know that. That's like saying every company is a "scam" because Enron ended up being fraudulent.

            Bitcoin can actually be very fast, especially when using the lightning network!

            Yep, and you have no one to blame for losing that except for yourself. That isn't a fault of cryptocurrency.

            Privacy to you may not be important. But it is for many, many people. We're lucky enough in Australia to not be persecuted for much as we have relative freedom. But in other more authoritarian countries, purchasing religious texts may be illegal. That's just one thing that comes to mind, but there are certainly more things that may be illegal, such as purchasing a VPN etc. Hell, maybe you just don't want to to be publicly known you bought something - even if it is legal.

            Not everyone has signed up for services that allow fee-free transfers. Sometimes those services aren't even available in other countries. Crypto allows anyone to spin up a wallet and send/receive funds with varying fees. You can choose your own fees in most instances as well.

            Smart contracts are most certainly used in the real world - perhaps just not in your industry. A major use of them is automated payments once certain requirements are met, many businesses use mechanisms like this to intake and dish out funds. Smart contracts are also NOT exclusive to cryptocurrency and dates back to use in the 90s with more primitive computing methods.

            I believe if you're sending over $10K AU, then you need to report it. Otherwise, you do not need to report anything. Even if you do report it, assuming you're not doing anything dodgy, it's fine. There's nothing stopping you from sending money across borders.

            Holding large amounts of cash is quite silly for a number of reasons (inflation etc). Also, goodluck paying for anything with gold - far less accepted than even cryptocurrencies. Yes you can exchange it, but I can exchange my couch for cash and then go buy groceries. If someone steals my cash, or my gold it's gone. If someone steals my cold wallet - those funds are traceable and at least have SOME possibility of being retrieved, and that's assuming it does get stolen, stealing someone's crypto wallet is useless if it's locked.

            Storing data on the blockchain CAN be private. Depends what blockchain you're using. If you use something like Bitcoin or Ethereum's chains, yes the data is publicly accessible and immutable. This also means money flows can be tracked. The privacy aspect is that no one knows who holds that money. You can certainly be identified - but again, that is up to the user's OPSEC and if they slip up. You can also use far more privacy centric coins such as MoneroXMR that do NOT make fund flow public, and therefore, is far more private.

            I get skepticism, but most of your points do not make much sense. You do not sound like you know much about the technology you're blindly claiming to be a scam.

            But each to their own I guess - if you want to hold all your wealth in cash - more power to you!

          • +1

            @Jowey: What goods and services online? Drugs on the darkweb?
            - Any business that accepts it as payment. Microsoft, PayPal, and online retailers that accept gift cards which can be purchsed with crypto.

            Investment? It's a scam.
            - Scam based on what? Bitcoin and Ethereum have been around for over a decade, and institutional investors hold crypto assets.

            Fast?! Bitcoin is not fast.
            - Lightning network

            Any other coin is a sh*tcoin.
            - Ethereum L2, stablecoins that mirror currencies. All shitcoins?

            Decentralisation means that if someone steals your coins or you lose your private key that your coins are gone forever.
            - Your safe at home holding your gold means that if someone steals the safe you lose your gold forever.

            Privacy? For what?
            - I travel to countries with authoritarian governments. If my purchases are anonymised it makes me feel more safe. Just as I assume you don’t want banks tracking every purchase. Businesses also have legit reasons for a need for confidentiality.

            Who knows what you've bought?
            - Your bank.

            And who cares?
            - I bet you support surveillance state because "theres nothing to worry about if you're not doing anything wrong"

            Low fees? lol I pay $0 to transfer money, if you pay $0.01 to transfer then you are getting ripped off - that's on you.
            - Where can you transfer money overseas for $0? Please enlighten me

            Smart contracts… no one uses them for real practical purposes.
            - It is about adoption. The technology is there for use and a benefit is that it provides total transparency. Until major corporations are pressured be transparent and not commit fraud, it would be limited to niche uses.

            Borderless payments - Go talk to AUSTRAC about that one
            - Because theres no other way to launder money amirite

            Ownership? You own cash that you hold. Or gold for that matter. Not an issue anywhere.
            - The government can't call up the CEO of crypto to freeze my funds. Meanwhile over at your bank…

            Blockchain data? I thought you said privacy was a point?
            - What is it with you and strawman arguments? There are different use cases for each. Bitcoin transactions are pseudonymous meaning they don’t expose personal details by default but provides a "receipt" as proof of transaction. Privacy coins like Monero offer additional anonymity for those who need it.

            They have places in shopping centres that buy your gold for cash, which could then be used to buy your groceries.
            That's because gold actually has value and crypto is a scam.
            - I can sell my BTC at a bitocoin ATM (albeit lose some value due to fees, but the gold merchant takes a cut anyway). I'd much rather just use my coinspot debit card though.

        • +2

          1) Fiat is already essentially digital
          2) Investment - hoping*. Large funds have pumped by investing in it. I guess it's no more useless than a "share" in a company.
          3) Fast Transacations - doesn't Fiat have fast transactions? Last time I transferred Eth I had to wait 5 mins because I didn't want to pay speed tax. You forgot to tell others about that btw.
          4) This is a valid point.
          5) Privacy? Refer to:
          a) https://mypolice.qld.gov.au/news/2024/04/29/crypto-currency-…
          b) https://www.afp.gov.au/news-centre/media-release/melbourne-f…
          c) https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-01-30/australian-sam-lee-ch…
          d) https://australiancybersecuritymagazine.com.au/australian-in…
          e) Also how many people are tracking Satoshi's wallet for when it finally moves? How is that privacy?

          It's more traceable than fiat.

          6) Last time I tried to sell BTC is cost me $20 to sell $100
          7) Double edges sword, also leads to encoded honeypots if you aren't savvy enough.
          8) True
          9) Refer to Point 5.
          10) True

          Crypto, like fiat can lead to scams. It has no more use cases today than when I first invested in 2017. A few shops accept Crypto and large equity firms have invested in it. But holy excrement it hasn't had a good track record. I've done mining, pump and dumps, shitcoins etc. Enough to say I'm ou, until BTC hits $20k again.

          • @Jazza2400: 4) Local bank transfers are quick but international transactions are much longer. BTC LN is also instant.

            5) Layer 2 transactions, Teleport. Bitcoin's strength is in building solutions on the network rather than shitcoins making a new coin for every "problem". If crypto wasn't private, then Monero wouldn't be banned*.

            6) If you choose to sell it to an exchange, the exchange can set what price they want. The cost to sell should only be the cost to transfer the coins.

          • @Jazza2400: 1) Subject to the whims of SWIFT and correspondent banking delays and fees, or higher conversion fees for direct currency swaps.
            2) If you're playing the penny stock game and looking for short term gains based on hype rather than understanding viable technologies, which a lot of individuals are, then that's on the individual.
            3) If 5 mins is a problem for sending uncensorable transactions then maybe you're not who this is for. Or just use an L2 or another network.
            5) Pseudonymity is a subset of privacy. There are other layers like Tornado Cash and Monero, along with ongoing development in privacy tech like ZK protocols, which continue to evolve despite regulatory hurdles.
            6) Yes, priority fees can be high during peak speculation, which reflects blockspace demand. Throw a TX into the mempool with minimal fee and it'll go through eventually. Unfortunately the store of value narrative has taken hold and limited development with fee/blockspace structure. That said, there are some interesting BTC L2 developments happening.
            7) Don't interact with unverified contracts, get caught up in speculation, or rush into pushing a TX.

            I get your perspective, and it’s valid based on your experience and that of others.
            My perspective might differ because I’ve been in the space for a while, kept up with developments, and understand the underlying principles and tech beyond just speculative trading.

            There definitely are protocols and Primitives that have indeed furthered use cases. Have a squizz at Wildcat Finance and Alchemix at a minimum.
            Don’t chase the latest shiny shitcoin/memecoin just because others tell you to, or treat it as a get-rich-quick scheme. Approach it differently, and things look very different.

    • Someone missed the boat.

      • -1

        What is its purpose?

        • The purpose is to get rich.

        • Purchasing goods and services, for one. Investing, for two.

          • -1

            @electricslapper: What have you bought with crypto?
            Besides other crypto?

            • +3

              @Jowey: For myself - gift cards, my monthly IPTV sub, CS2 skins. Have you never heard of crypto before? There's really not a lot you can't buy 😂

    • Recommend not responding to that. They just parrot what the media says without any investigation.

    • -1

      Thanks for your financial advice. Baaaaaaaaaaaa

  • -4

    Wow, lose $170, excellent bargain.

    • -1

      Easily covered by what most of us have already made from them

    • Are you not able withdraw the funds after?

      • Nope, they just made that up basically. You can actually payid the funds back almost instantly after completion. They're referring to the crypto somehow losing all it's value in 24hrs.

  • +4

    I get: "Unable to join the campaign. According to our terms of service, you can't join this campaign right now."

    Anyone found a way around this?

  • Is this targeted or for new users only? I can't see it.

  • +4

    I bought USDT, less likely to tank 20% before tomorrow.

  • +4

    Thanks OP. I absolutely detest crypto but I do love free money.

  • -2

    $200 to provide exit liquidity for others, lol. There's far too much risk involved in this for the sake of what may or may not be an AU$30 return (AU$20ish after fees) plus the effort involved with factoring this into your tax return due to aspects such as CGT & the fact you're giving your identity documents away to the Chinese.

    • Hope the ATO doesn't come after me for not declaring the nationalities I gave my ID to

  • +2

    A couple seconds work for $27 net profit

    • It isn't $27 profit.

      Processor fee + bad exchange rate on USDT.

      Its closer to around $15.

      • I paid $3 fee and $2 extra on the BTC spread

  • +1

    Lame, opened an account to be prompted with
    "According to our terms & service,, you are unable to join the campaign right now"

    • -1

      Try the campaign centre https://www.okx.com/en-au/campaign-center
      It could be slow to update, but there are referral rewards too

      • +1

        Ya I can see it at the bottom with parti or something but still won't work.

        I got the spend $20 and get $20 so I ain't complaining 😅

        • -1

          Strange, but try contacting them if you still want this deal before all 1000 are claimed.

    • +1

      Same, unable to join the last 2 I tried. Wondering why? Was able to do it in the past :(

  • Cant join

  • Tried to sign up but couldn't verify my ID. I felt like those flashing lights were going to give me a seizure and it didn't even work.

  • Usdt or btc is better to buy so it doesnt drop by tomorrow ?

    • +1

      USDT is hedged to us dollar. lol for all we know trump could say something and "tank it" tomorrow.

      Buy USDT anyway. Its the differnce between -2% or -20%

  • Don’t you need to buy more than $200 of the fee is $3?

    • +1

      Flat $200 shows first task completed, but still need to wait for reward

      • +1

        Should we be concerned the 2nd task says “Maintain your invested funds for 1 day without dropping below the required amount to complete the task within the campaign period. Your progress will reset if funds fall short.”

        I bought AUD205 of USDT (paid AUD3.08 fees) and my account now shows AUD199.18.

  • Revolut didnt charge a 3$ transaction fee as mentioned by okx,but did hit me with a 1% weekend exchange rate fee

    • Is it still cheaper using Revolut?

    • The $3 fee was a reduction in the asset that I bought, so it was "worth" $197 minus another small fee. Still OK as long as the reward comes through

  • Worth as long as it's money you can't afford to lose

  • +2

    Signed up but can’t join. Tried all the links in the comments that people offer and still nothing. I did get the $20 BTC for using the referral though.

    OP the money you’ve made from OKX, is that just via completing campaigns they offer you every now and again?

    • +1

      Sorry you couldn't join this campaign, but glad you still got the $20.

      OP the money you’ve made from OKX, is that just via completing campaigns they offer you every now and again?

      Yes, I have earned all those rewards exclusively from these campaigns.

  • -1

    Avoid. Last time went through the sign up hastle only to get an error when trying to accept the promo. Customer service was no help and just passed it on to a team that will get back to you after the promo would've been finished.

    In the end there's a good chance you give them all your data and they block you from the promo. Scum.

  • +1

    I just withdrew $225.75, not a bad overnight return.

    • What is the best way in the app to sell your initial investment and the bonus $20 USDT to incur the least fees?

    • Did you buy exactly AUD200?

      There’s some uncertainty here: https://www.ozbargain.com.au/comment/16390168/redir

      • +2

        Yes, I spent AUD200 on USDT using the card purchase (CBA debit card), and then swapped all the USDT back to AUD on the spot market and got $225.75 back in my CBA account.

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