Skip to main content
Back to Numbers generators

Numbers

Test Credit Card BIN Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A test credit card BIN generator gives developers and QA engineers structurally valid Bank Identification Numbers without touching live card data. The BIN — the first 6 digits of any payment card — tells a processor which network to route through, which bank issued the card, and what rules apply before a transaction is even authorized. Testing that routing logic requires real-looking prefixes, and using actual BINs in development risks PCI DSS scope creep. This tool generates BINs that follow correct prefix ranges: Visa starting with 4, Mastercard covering 51–55 and 22–27, Amex using 34 or 37, and Discover using 6011 or 65. Choose a specific network or randomize across all four, then set your batch size up to whatever count you need.

Loading usage…

Free forever — no account required

How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Select a card network from the dropdown, or leave it on Random to get a mixed batch across all supported networks.
  2. Set the count field to the number of BINs you need, from a single sample up to a larger batch for database seeding.
  3. Click Generate to produce the BIN list instantly, with each result following the correct prefix format for the chosen network.
  4. Copy individual BINs or the full list, then paste them into your payment integration tests, unit test fixtures, or BIN lookup validation scripts.

Use Cases

  • Seeding a staging Postgres database with multi-network BIN samples for routing logic tests
  • Unit testing card-type detection functions in Jest to confirm Amex 15-digit enforcement triggers correctly
  • Validating that a Stripe or Adyen integration renders the correct network logo in a React checkout form
  • Checking that surcharge or interchange rules fire per network in billing software without using real card data
  • Generating a Discover-only BIN batch to test acceptance-filter logic when a merchant restricts supported networks

Tips

  • When testing card-type detection, generate 20+ BINs on Random and verify your code correctly classifies every single one without hardcoded prefix checks.
  • Amex cards are 15 digits and use a 4-digit CVV — generate Amex BINs separately so you can test those field-length edge cases in isolation.
  • Combine output from this generator with a full test card number tool to build complete 15- or 16-digit numbers that pass Luhn validation.
  • If your gateway charges different fees by network, generate one batch per network and run them through your fee calculation logic to confirm each rule triggers correctly.
  • The 8-digit BIN migration means some processors now read the first 8 digits before the 6. Test both BIN lengths if your integration targets a multi-processor environment.
  • Save a small fixture file of known BINs per network inside your test suite rather than calling a generator dynamically, so tests remain deterministic and fast.

FAQ

are these generated BINs safe to use in a test environment under PCI DSS

Yes. PCI DSS explicitly requires separating test data from production cardholder data, and using non-real BINs satisfies that requirement. These BINs follow correct prefix formats but are not linked to any real issuing bank, so they carry no compliance risk in a dev or QA environment.

can I use a BIN alone to test a Luhn check algorithm

No — a BIN is only 6 digits, and Luhn validation requires a full 15- or 16-digit card number. Pair these BINs with a test card number generator that appends a valid account number and check digit. The BIN prefix will still reflect the correct network, so your routing logic gets realistic input.

what's the difference between a BIN and an IIN

They refer to the same thing: the first 6 (or 8) digits of a payment card. IIN — Issuer Identification Number — is the technically correct ISO 7812 term, but BIN dominates in payment APIs, fraud tooling, and developer docs. Note that the industry is migrating to 8-digit BINs, so confirm which standard your processor supports before testing.