Travelambo-Men's Wallet via Amazon has Travelambo Leather RFID Minimalist Slim Wallet (4 colors) on sale for $9.99 - $5 (activate 50% off promo here or apply code H4H4W3KH at checkout) = $4.99. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.
Thanks to Deal Hunter Navy-Wife for finding this deal.
This collaborative space allows users to contribute additional information, tips, and insights to enhance the original deal post. Feel free to share your knowledge and help fellow shoppers make informed decisions.
Travelambo-Men's Wallet via Amazon has Travelambo Leather RFID Minimalist Slim Wallet (4 colors) on sale for $9.99 - $5 (activate 50% off promo here or apply code H4H4W3KH at checkout) = $4.99. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.
Thanks to Deal Hunter Navy-Wife for finding this deal.
Model: Travelambo Front Pocket Minimalist Leather Slim Wallet RFID Blocking Carbon Fiber Texture(Black)
Deal HistoryÂ
Deal History includes data from multiple reputable stores, such as Best Buy, Target, and Walmart. The lowest price among stores for a given day is selected as the "Sale Price".
Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
Sale Price
Slickdeal
$NaN
Today
Current Prices
Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 11/3/2025, 02:17 AM
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Ride_The_Sky
Credit cards are almost never swiped anymore, why do they have to still be full card size? I would love to carry one card with 2 chips, one on either sides and if we really need magnetic strip, maybe 2 stripes on it too. Or just small cards we can tap to pay or insert when needed..
Credit cards are almost never swiped anymore, why do they have to still be full card size? I would love to carry one card with 2 chips, one on either sides and if we really need magnetic strip, maybe 2 stripes on it too. Or just small cards we can tap to pay or insert when needed..
All good questions and no reason you can't cut out your CC chips to make a smaller credit card. You'll lose the swipe feature. I loaded my CC to Google wallet and tap to pay. Be aware not all stores accept Apple pay
All good questions and no reason you can't cut out your CC chips to make a smaller credit card. You'll lose the swipe feature. I loaded my CC to Google wallet and tap to pay. Be aware not all stores accept Apple pay
Let's get RFID chips inserted in the arm so you only have to wave your arm across a reader.
Credit cards are almost never swiped anymore, why do they have to still be full card size? I would love to carry one card with 2 chips, one on either sides and if we really need magnetic strip, maybe 2 stripes on it too. Or just small cards we can tap to pay or insert when needed..
Credit cards are almost never swiped anymore, why do they have to still be full card size? I would love to carry one card with 2 chips, one on either sides and if we really need magnetic strip, maybe 2 stripes on it too. Or just small cards we can tap to pay or insert when needed..
I have a minimalist wallet similar to this, but rarely take it out in stores.All of my cards, including my DL are on my phone.
These are great and small! They are nice and flat. I am on my second one now. First one lasted around 4 years. I have the carbon fiber look, and it isnt all that noticeable.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank robisodd
Quote
from Ride_The_Sky
:
Credit cards are almost never swiped anymore, why do they have to still be full card size? I would love to carry one card with 2 chips, one on either sides and if we really need magnetic strip, maybe 2 stripes on it too. Or just small cards we can tap to pay or insert when needed..
Note that the RFID coil goes around the perimeter of the credit card, so if you cut out the chip you are cutting through the wires and will no longer have tap-to-pay. Use your phone's flashlight and hold it up to the card to see the coil of wire. There are other methods of making smaller RFID coils, though.
The full size of a credit card helps align the chip, so if you cut your cards into strips to reduce their size, you have to make sure to get it aligned in the slot just right in order for the chip to connect.
Also, two chips on one card is doable, but what two cards are you putting on there? One Visa the other Mastercard? One from Chase the other from another Chase account but it would expire on a different date requiring a replacement card twice as often? It would be like saying you can have two different albums on both sides of a CD or record or tape, which would reduce the size of your physical music collection in half, but make things more difficult. Going digital (RFID on cell phone -- and music on cell phone lol) may be the better way.
2
3
1
Like
Helpful
Funny
Not helpful
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Note that the RFID coil goes around the perimeter of the credit card, so if you cut out the chip you are cutting through the wires and will no longer have tap-to-pay. Use your phone's flashlight and hold it up to the card to see the coil of wire. There are other methods of making smaller RFID coils, though.
The full size of a credit card helps align the chip, so if you cut your cards into strips to reduce their size, you have to make sure to get it aligned in the slot just right in order for the chip to connect.
Also, two chips on one card is doable, but what two cards are you putting on there? One Visa the other Mastercard? One from Chase the other from another Chase account but it would expire on a different date requiring a replacement card twice as often? It would be like saying you can have two different albums on both sides of a CD or record or tape, which would reduce the size of your physical music collection in half, but make things more difficult. Going digital (RFID on cell phone -- and music on cell phone lol) may be the better way.
I had no idea rfid was using a large coil, thanks for that. I always thought it's a small chip size apparatus. Having 2 accounts on one card would help carry just one card in case we can't use tap to pay, so there is still swipe option on the card, in addition to any potential phone is out of battery. Unfortunately there is still no regulation for merchants to have tap to pay POS units unlike in Europe, 99% POS comes to you to tap. I was huge advocate of Samsung Pay (original magnetic emulation, that worked on swipe terminals), that was an amazing idea that helped bridge the gap.
Leave a Comment
38 Comments
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Warforged
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Ride_The_Sky
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank robisodd
The full size of a credit card helps align the chip, so if you cut your cards into strips to reduce their size, you have to make sure to get it aligned in the slot just right in order for the chip to connect.
Also, two chips on one card is doable, but what two cards are you putting on there? One Visa the other Mastercard? One from Chase the other from another Chase account but it would expire on a different date requiring a replacement card twice as often? It would be like saying you can have two different albums on both sides of a CD or record or tape, which would reduce the size of your physical music collection in half, but make things more difficult. Going digital (RFID on cell phone -- and music on cell phone lol) may be the better way.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
The full size of a credit card helps align the chip, so if you cut your cards into strips to reduce their size, you have to make sure to get it aligned in the slot just right in order for the chip to connect.
Also, two chips on one card is doable, but what two cards are you putting on there? One Visa the other Mastercard? One from Chase the other from another Chase account but it would expire on a different date requiring a replacement card twice as often? It would be like saying you can have two different albums on both sides of a CD or record or tape, which would reduce the size of your physical music collection in half, but make things more difficult. Going digital (RFID on cell phone -- and music on cell phone lol) may be the better way.
Leave a Comment