Managing AWS cloud costs is a key challenge for growing businesses. Virtual cards offer a practical way to pay AWS bills while keeping spending under control. Here’s how you can use DogPay for AWS billing.

First, fund your DogPay wallet with USDC or other supported stablecoins. Once your wallet is topped up, you can generate a dedicated virtual card for AWS. Each card comes with a unique card number, expiry, and CVV. You can set spending limits per card, which helps prevent unexpected charges.

Add the DogPay virtual card as a payment method in your AWS account. Navigate to the Payment Methods section under Billing and Cost Management. Enter the card details from DogPay. AWS will process a small verification charge to confirm the card is valid; this amount is returned within a few days.

After the card is added, you can assign it as the default payment method or use it for specific AWS services. DogPay cards support stablecoin settlement, which means your payments are processed using digital dollars, reducing reliance on traditional banking rails.

For teams, DogPay provides spend visibility. You can track AWS expenses per card, receive transaction notifications, and manage multiple cards for different projects or departments. If a card’s limit is reached, AWS will prompt you to update the payment method, so you can quickly add a new card or adjust the limit.

DogPay fits into your AWS billing workflow as a payment infrastructure layer. It offers dedicated virtual cards, global account capabilities for multi-region teams, and stablecoin settlement for faster, lower-cost transactions. While DogPay does not guarantee that every AWS payment will succeed—because AWS may decline a card for its own reasons—it provides a reliable card issuance and management platform. With DogPay, you can configure cards with custom limits, monitor spending in real time, and maintain separate cards for different cloud subscriptions, all while keeping your primary bank accounts separate.