Pin Up Minimum Withdrawal: £5 / $10 / ₹500 per Method
Pin Up's minimum withdrawal amount depends on three things: the method you pick, the currency your account is denominated in, and your VIP tier. The floor sits at roughly $10 USD equivalent for most rails and drops to ₹500 INR or R$50 BRL for local country rails. Everything above this is my personal cashier testing across currencies plus cross-references against reader submissions. Pin Up can adjust minimums without a public announcement, so always check the cashier before you plan a withdrawal against the number below.
The Minimum Withdrawal Table
| Method | USD min | EUR min | GBP min | INR min | BRL min |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UPI (India) | — | — | — | ₹500 | — |
| Pix (Brazil) | — | — | — | — | R$50 |
| E-wallet (Skrill) | $10 | €10 | £10 | — | — |
| E-wallet (Neteller) | $10 | €10 | £10 | — | — |
| Card Visa/Mastercard | $10 | €10 | £10 | ₹750 | R$60 |
| Card RuPay | — | — | — | ₹500 | — |
| Crypto BTC | $50 | €45 | £40 | — | — |
| Crypto USDT TRC-20 | $20 | €18 | £16 | — | — |
| Bank transfer SEPA | $50 | €50 | £40 | — | — |
| Bank transfer SWIFT | $100 | €90 | £80 | — | — |
Verified April 2026. Em-dash (—) means the method isn't available in that currency. Pin Up adjusts minimums with exchange rate drift — always confirm in the cashier.
Quick Intent Match: What Most Users Actually Ask
- Lowest global floor: $10 equivalent on cards/e-wallets in most USD/EUR/GBP accounts.
- Lowest country floors: UPI at ₹500 and Pix at R$50.
- Not truly universal: BTC and bank rails start materially higher, so small-balance cashouts should avoid them.
Why the Minimum Varies per Method
The minimum isn't arbitrary. It's driven by the cost of running a payout on each rail. Card networks charge Pin Up's payment processor a fixed-fee per transaction (typically $0.30–$0.50), so a $1 withdrawal would be unprofitable to process. E-wallets have similar fixed costs. UPI and Pix, by contrast, have near-zero per-transaction costs in their respective national frameworks, which is why Pin Up can offer minimums as low as ₹500 or R$50 without losing money.
Crypto minimums are driven by network fees. TRC-20 has ~$1 fees so the $20 minimum is a practical floor. BTC mainnet fees spike to $10–$30 during congestion, which is why the BTC minimum sits at $50 — below that the fee would eat a meaningful chunk of the payout. Bank transfer minimums are highest because correspondent bank fees compound across the payment chain, especially on SWIFT.
Currency Conversion Trap
If your Pin Up account is in a different currency than the destination (e.g., account in EUR, withdraw to USD e-wallet), Pin Up applies a currency conversion at the platform rate. The conversion happens at request time, not credit time, and the rate has a small spread above interbank. For small amounts this costs a dollar or two. For larger amounts it can be meaningful — check the exchange rate in the cashier before you confirm.
The minimum listed in the table is the amount you'll see at the cashier. If you convert currencies, the minimum is enforced after conversion, which means a $10 USD withdrawal from a EUR account actually requires about €9.20 in your Pin Up balance (at a 1:1.08 rate). The cashier will tell you this automatically — just know why the number isn't round.
Country Scenarios (Applied Examples)
India (INR wallet)
For small withdrawals in India, UPI at ₹500 is usually the practical floor. Card rails may show ₹750 or higher depending on issuer routing and account currency settings.
Brazil (BRL wallet)
For Brazil, Pix at R$50 beats card rails for both minimum and speed. Cards can appear at R$60+ and carry slower payout windows.
Global USD/EUR players
If you are outside local rails, e-wallet/card at $10 equivalent usually wins on floor size. Use crypto only when the amount is large enough that network costs are negligible.
Minimum for First vs Subsequent Withdrawals
The minimum is the same for first and subsequent withdrawals on all methods I've tested. The first-withdrawal slowdown is in processing time (KYC sign-off), not in minimum amount. If the cashier is telling you a higher minimum than the table above, check for two things: an active bonus raising the effective threshold, or a country-specific regulatory adjustment applied to your account.
Tips From My Testing
- Request above the floor, not at it. A $10.00 withdrawal sometimes hits rounding issues with certain payment processors. Request $10.50 to avoid "amount too low" errors.
- Don't split into multiple tiny payouts. Each withdrawal triggers a compliance screen and costs you time. Consolidate into one larger request per day instead.
- Check the cashier after you type the amount. Pin Up updates the "estimated delivery" line based on your amount — this is the fastest way to see if your method and amount combination will work.
- For tiny amounts, use UPI or Pix. The low floors and near-instant delivery make these rails the winners for anything under $50 equivalent.
Related Pages
If you're planning a bigger payout, the maximum withdrawal page covers daily, weekly, and monthly caps. The methods comparison has the speed-vs-minimum tradeoff for each rail. The FAQ answers the single most-asked question (£5 vs $10 conversion) in detail. For evidence-backed timing context, see processing times and proof gallery.
