The following information is provided strictly for
educational purposes, to help users understand how payment systems, fraud prevention mechanisms, and BIN (Bank Identification Number) data work — particularly in the Canadian context.
Understanding BINs, CVVs, and Online Payment Verification
1. What is a BIN?
- The BIN (Bank Identification Number) is the first 4 to 6 digits of a credit or debit card.
- It identifies the issuing bank, card type (Visa, Mastercard, etc.), card level (Classic, Gold, Platinum), and country of issue.
- Example: A BIN starting with 451402 might belong to a TD Bank Visa card issued in Canada.
BIN databases are used by merchants and payment processors to:
- Validate transaction legitimacy
- Detect potential fraud
- Apply regional processing rules
2. Why Are You Being Redirected to SMS/Email Verification?
When you attempt a transaction online and are redirected to verification steps (e.g., SMS one-time passcode, email confirmation, or 3D Secure authentication), this is due to
fraud prevention systems such as:
- 3D Secure (Verified by Visa / Mastercard Identity Check): Adds an extra authentication step during checkout.
- Bank Triggers: Unusual spending patterns, foreign IP addresses, or high-risk merchant categories can trigger additional verification.
- Card Security Settings: Many Canadian banks now default to requiring multi-factor authentication (MFA) on most online transactions—even domestic ones.
- Tokenization & Device Recognition: If the card hasn’t been used from that device/browser before, the system may require re-verification.

Example: Using a RBC Visa card from a new location (or virtual machine/tor network) will likely trigger an SMS code requirement—even if the card details are correct.
3. Why "CVVs" or Card Data Might Not Work
If you're testing card data (even hypothetically), here's why it fails:
REASON | EXPLANATION |
---|
Invalid or Stolen Data | Most working card numbers with valid CVVs are protected by real-time fraud detection. |
Geolocation Mismatch | Attempting a transaction from outside Canada may prompt verification or decline. |
Expired Cards | Old BIN lists often contain outdated or expired card ranges. |
Issuer Fraud Rules | Canadian banks like CIBC, Scotiabank, and BMO have strong AI-based fraud monitoring. |
Prepaid/Virtual Cards | Some bins belong to single-use virtual cards that can't be reused. |
4. Are There "Working" Bins in Canada Right Now?
Yes — but only
carding issued cards through authorized channels.
Banks in Canada continuously issue new cards under active BINs. Examples include:
BIN RANGE (EXAMPLE) | ISSUER | CARD TYPE |
---|
451400 – 451499 | TD Bank | Visa Credit |
542485 – 542489 | CIBC | Mastercard |
453758 – 453759 | RBC | Visa Infinite |
512748 – 512751 | Scotiabank | Mastercard World |
5. How Banks and Merchants Prevent Unauthorized Use
Canadian financial institutions employ advanced tools:
- Velocity Checks: Monitoring rapid transaction attempts.
- Device Fingerprinting: Tracking browser/device signatures.
- Behavioral Analytics: Comparing purchase habits.
- Network Tokens: Replacing actual card numbers in digital wallets.
Even if someone had partial card data, these systems would block suspicious activity.