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I love the idea behind Coin but what I need is a fat wallet.

I carry 19 cards, of which 16 are essential. Some of them are not for swiping so they wouldn't benefit from Coin. The solution for me is a wallet that can hold 20 to 30 cards, but as far as I can tell there's no such thing.




Out of curiosity, what do you do that requires 16 cards on a regular basis? At some point, the limiting factor of how many cards you can carry becomes your pant pocket (or purse). My jeans wouldn't stand more than a few cards and far less than 30.


Here's my list:

* Costco membership card

* three loyalty shopper cards for my common stores (I need the physical card because none of the apps I've tried using that scan the bar codes work with store scanners)

* a card to pay for my train rides,

* bank debit card for ATMS

* business credit card

* personal credit card

* medical insurance card (this one would be easy to just use a photo of)

* AAA card (would be easy to use photo of)

* Zip Car Card

* Bus pass card for corporate shuttle

* Airlines MVP card (likely easy to just use a photo of, I think....though I'm not sure about speedy checkin).

* Access card for corporate office.

* Drivers license

I have about 25 other cards that I keep at home, like Library, more shopper perks cards (usually because they can lookup by my email address in store), etc..

This doesn't really help my wallet situation that much.


I use Lemon Wallet and took photos of everything here that's NOT a credit card. I carry three cards. Drivers License, and two credit cards.

Soon to be one.


That Lemon Wallet app looks really nice. I'm going to give it a go... I've tired some others, but didn't like them.

Also, I was a user of both Belly and Level Up for awhile. But the merchants around here have been finicky with the services and some of the shops I frequent stopped using them.


Don't know if your personal card is an Amex or not, but my Amex is a Costco Amex and doubles as my membership card.

I'm surprised your loyalty cards aren't the smaller key ring ones. I have half a dozen on my keys and barely notice them.

I leave my AAA and Airline cards at home and pull them out when I need them for trips. Could probably do the same for your Zip Car card (unless you use the service multiple times a week or something) and other rarely used cards.

Last year my medical insurance company switched to paper cards which are much thinner and easier to deal with even if they're less sturdy. Same as my car insurance.

All that being said I still walk around with about a dozen cards in my wallet, so I can definitely sympathize. But I could probably edit out 3 or 4 right now and not really miss them.


The problem is any time you edit some of them out, you realize soon after that you don't have the one you need. If I don't carry around the cards I will need every day, I am likely to forget to take the ones I need only occasionally when I do need them.

The problem is that Coin doesn't really solve this. It only encodes credit cards; most of the other cards either don't have mag stripes or require other information on the cards than just what's on the mag stripe.


That happens to me all the time with my airline club cards. I always get to the airport and realize I forgot them.


Ironically, I think my AAA card could double as a AMEX. But I don't use it for that.

I do have a lot of the shopper cards available on key. But I run uber-light on my keys and shifting cards from one pocket to another doesn't really help me gain anything. Also, with the key-ring versions, I've shared them with my S.O. so we can keep all our groceries and loyalty points together so they add up faster for household items or discounted gas, etc...

The problem with leaving a card like Zip Card at home is I'm inevitably going to be somewhere that's not home and need a Zip Car.


I managed to cut down the bulk in my wallet by 3 cards by photocopying the barcode side of my loyalty cards and sticky taping them to other cards which don't need to be swiped (nfc based transport card, nfc based car share card)


Ooooh....this low-tech idea is very good. I've often wanted to create a single card (same shape and size of credit card) that I could print my essentials on so they could be scanned by a red laser scanner.


Could you not keep your costco card in your car, or at home and just bring it when you need it? Same with your airline cards?


I don't currently have a car, so my ability to go to Costco is usually a very impromptu thing.


So far I can recommend a wallet from SaddleBack leather. solid construction and it does get soft after half a year of use.

Though because of the size I keep mine in my front pocket, also handy as I believe it lessens the chance of having it pick-pocketed.


Re: Loyalty cards - you can almost always just enter your phone number at merchants. I've encountered no exceptions to this, but I'm sure they exist.


That's why the majority of them stay at home. For some reason, the grocery stores, when doing self-checkout and such, don't have email input or phone number. :(

EDIT: I should add that the main grocery store I shop at, you scan your card when you enter and are given a wand to checkout your groceries as you add them to the bag.


This isn't going to work for your zipcar card, access card for your office, and possibly your bus pass.


Couldn't you get a combined debit and credit card?


I have an airlines reward card, a business card, and an ATM card. I don't think there's a way to combine the airlines reward with the ATM, even though they are from the same bank.


It's pretty funny, because all of these except a couple (which I noted) are pretty necessary and no work around. It's like people commenting to this thread didn't even read what I originally wrote. Anyway, I'm adding here a list of more cards that stay at home that I occasionally use.

Also, I could elaborate more on why certain cards need to be with me, but I thought things like Costo & Zip Car were pretty obvious.

So the list of home cards:

* MTA Metro Card for when I'm in NYC.

* USA Cycling license for racing (they have an app now that I can use when I show up at races)

* Best Buy Rewards card (I know, I know....but they can look up by my email)

* Several complimentary coffee cards for Peet's coffee (Yeup, they are useless to me at home, but I got tired of carrying them around)

* Borders Reward card (ooops, looks like I haven't cleaned out my home stack in awhile)

* Amtrak rewards card (just need the number and website has this remembered)

* Local Library card (they can use my driver's license, but I can't use the self checkout, which is OK becasue the line isn't ever long and I don't use often enough)

* Library Card for the bigger city by me

* NSSA Press Credentials (only needed when attending certain sporting events - I grab this one as necessary)

* APIS Press Credentials (same as above)

* Bike Club Membership card (provides discounts at local stores, but they know me and I don't need it anymore)

* Panera card (I think I needed this at one time to access Wi-Fi or something)

* Card for my season ski tune & discount (though customized, I think they just look me up in the computer or remember my face)

* Season pass card to get into a apre-ski venue for free

* AMC Entertainment gift card (I go to the movies once/year, and everytime I forget to bring this thing)

* Safeway Card (only useful when I'm on the West Coast grocery shopping. I've since learned to use my Brother's phone number)

* EFTA racing license for mountain bike race series around here in the summer time.

* NEMBA Membership card (mountain bike related)

* Gift Card to another coffee shop

* Home Depot Gift card (exact credit card shape and size)

So, as you can see, I've optimized a good chunk out of my wallet , but it's not all the way there. Though a couple of my cards "could go" there's still about 12 or 13 essential cards I must carry with me.


I carry two government-issued ids; one driver's license; two medical ids; three credit cards, two debit cards and two coordinate cards (two-factor auth) related to three bank accounts; my mother's two debit cards and one medical id (she's elderly and I take care af all her needs); and one medical emergency info card. That's 16. Membership and discount cards are the non-essential ones.

I do have all of those cards scanned and stored in dropbox with 1password, but I don't have good 3g coverage so I carry them just in case.

I carry my fat wallet in a fanny pack. Not very elegant, but incredibly practical.


I think in your scenario, a good fit would be a cigarette case that you'd keep in your front pocket.

I'd love to have one with a classy finish and that would block NFC signals from leaking.

I ended up ditching all but essential cards and got down to five. One debit, credit, health insurance, license, and AAA.


I think in your scenario, a good fit would be a cigarette case that you'd keep in your front pocket.

Eurpean here. I was shocked to learn many USAian men keep their wallet in the back pocket. How do you sit on that?


Many Americans do, indeed, keep bulging tri-fold wallets in their rear pockets. And they even drive their cars and sit at their desks with them.

Often you will spot them with a month's worth of paper receipts crammed inside so the poor wallet is about to burst.

It is just conventionally where a man's wallet goes in America--One of those things where you don't apply common sense because it's just "how it is" and you've never really thought about it.


I'm British and I do that...

What happens is you grow a dent in your butt, and get a lopsided spine. Yay!


I'm American and I never understood the back-pocket thing until I moved to the West Coast and started carrying my (bulky, remote) car key in addition to just house keys. Once you have those and a phone in your front pockets, something has to go in your back pocket.


Born and raised in Cali. I've always had keys in my right, phone in my left, wallet in back right.

I remember before I even had a cell phone myself and people in general still put their wallets in the back right, and it was cool to have a chain attached to it and hooked to your front right belt loop. I'd use my front pockets for all sorts of random crap, but I think I always had my keys in my front right. I've been really good about virtually never having lost a key in my life. I used to carry a pocket watch in my left.

Now I am faced with a pocket dilemma. I carry one phone for data and a 5s that I am using with a SIM (connected via pdanet/foxfi hotspot). So the two phones are taking up both front pockets! I'm currently either putting my keys in my jacket or in my back left pocket, which can potentially be quite uncomfortable to sit on. Would be cool if there was an easy way to flatten keys like a wallet.


I'm european, and hold my wallet in the back pocket or in my jacket. I just take it out and put it on the table when sitting.


I simply do not buy pants which don't come with extra pockets over the thighs. They are really hard to find, but they Solve The Problem. (I'm Brazilian, but atypical in this habit)


Wait, there are trousers which don't come with pockets in the front/over the thighs?!


I meant extra pockets, also in the front, over the lower thighs, for a total of 6 pockets, 4 of which in the front.

Unlike the upper pockets, those extra two are in an area which you don't squeeze when sitting.


I have a money clip, a smart phone and keys. Phone needs to be in a front pocket so that I don't sit on it and break it. Keys need to be in my front right pocket so that they are accessible and I do not sit on them and never sit again.

Thus my billfold must go in one of my rear pockets.


For me, the money clip and keys are in the right pocket, and the smart phone goes in the left front pocket.

The keys and money clip are distinct enough that I have no problem pulling out the right thing. And the keys are not going to damage the money clip like they would damage the phone.


Same here. Phone in left. Keys, money clip, change, pocket knife and everything else in right. I try very hard to never put anything in my pocket with my phone. mostly for ease of access but also to avoid scratches.


I feel that the money clip and keys create too large a disruption in the line of my trousers, esp. with the newer fitted trousers.

Also, with the fitted slacks it's harder reach past the keys to the money clip or vice versa.


Phone is too big to be comfortable in a pocket, so I use a horizontal belt clip, which is pretty unobtrusive, especially if you wear a jacket or loose shirts. Wallet and keys in front pockets, leaving my arse free for comfortable sitting.


lmao, so do I. I got a slimmer wallet though, no coins and not much room for junk, six cards and a note container. Made out of plastic. Lasts forever. Kinda destroys the magnetic strips on credit cards though, oops, and cards in the back aren't very accessible.


16 "essential" cards? And most/all are mag-stripe and could go on coin? I have a DL and a credit card. Everything else can be easily stored on my phone.


Answered elsewhere but the Coin is not a good idea for reasons also answered elsewhere (merchants wouldn't take it, your account could be flagged, etc).


It's less than 19, but perhaps the coolest card wallet on the market. Their kickstarter was a HUGE success. Maybe get two of them?

http://www.ridgewallet.com/ http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/124039987/the-bridge-fro...


I supported the ThinFolio, I'm hoping to have another go with minimizing my wallet utilizing low-tech photocopying/pasting of bar codes to a single card & Lemon Wallet.

I think I'll be able to get down to about 8 essentials, and hope I don't forget the others when needed.

http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/markabramson/thinfolio-t...


I have a Titanium Ridge, it is really nicely made, but I found it scratched my phone's screen.


I use this wallet: http://www.vat19.com/dvds/the-mighty-wallet.cfm

It's paper thin, but strong enough that it hasn't fallen apart after years of use. It only has 6 pockets though, so it's not going to separate all of your cards.


Hmm. No offense, but that looks like somthing my 12 year-old son would use. I can't be seen with that! :)


I've used the Smart Money Clip for about 6 years and love it.

http://www.smartmoneyclip.com/


These hold 12 max but they do offer rfid protection and i guess you could get 2 (1 business, 1 personal?)

http://www.secrid.nl/en/index.html


Get a little plastic wallet designed for holding business cards? Use it for credit cards?




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