Pay for The New Yorker with Plu.

Global payments

Pay for The New Yorker with a Plu Visa when The New Yorker checkout or subscription billing rejects local cards or domestic-only BINs.

App StoreGoogle Play

International billing

The New Yorker routes payments through US/EU-led stacks. Domestic debit profiles often fail verification, renewals, or cross-border authorization.

What works

Use a funded Visa built for global SaaS and subscriptions — add it in The New Yorker's billing or wallet and top up before renewals.

With Plu

Fund Plu from supported rails or stablecoins, enter your Plu Visa at The New Yorker, and keep payments predictable.

FAQ

Will my Plu card work for The New Yorker payments?

Yes. Plu issues a Visa card built for international merchant billing. The New Yorker processes payments through standard card rails, so a funded Plu card with sufficient balance clears at checkout or on renewal — including recurring charges.

Why does my local card sometimes fail on The New Yorker?

The New Yorker bills through US- and EU-based processors. Domestic-only debit cards or bank cards without international authorization often get rejected at the network level — not by The New Yorker itself. Plu is a Visa card explicitly built for cross-border SaaS and subscription billing, so authorization profiles match what The New Yorker's acquirer expects.

How do I fund Plu before paying The New Yorker?

Top up Plu via local bank transfer, mobile money in supported markets (M-Pesa, Wave, Orange Money, MTN MoMo), or USDT/USDC on Tron (TRC20) or Ethereum (ERC20). Stablecoins clear in seconds with sub-$1 network fees on Tron. Once funded, add your Plu Visa in The New Yorker's billing settings and you're ready to pay.

← All payment guidesNigeria payment hub →

Country blogs (e.g. Nigeria blog) add local context; these guides stay global so we do not duplicate thin pages per market.