Service Codes on Magnetic Stripe Cards – The Complete Explanation 2026

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(The 3-digit code in Track 1 & Track 2 that tells terminals how to process the card – exact meanings from ISO/IEC 7813 & EMV standards)

What is a Service Code? The service code is a 3-digit number encoded in both Track 1 and Track 2 of the magnetic stripe (and mirrored in EMV chip data). It tells the terminal:
  • Where the card can be used (international/national)
  • What technology to prefer (chip/magstripe/contactless)
  • If PIN is required
  • Other restrictions

Format: XXX (3 digits)
  • First digit: Interchange & technology
  • Second digit: Authorization processing
  • Third digit: Services allowed / PIN requirements

Full Service Code Table (All Possible Values – 2025 Standard)​

First Digit – Interchange & Technology
DigitMeaning
0Reserved / Proprietary
1International interchange OK
2International interchange + integrated circuit (chip) preferred
5National interchange only
6National interchange + integrated circuit preferred
7Private use / No interchange
9Test / Proprietary

Second Digit – Authorization Processing
DigitMeaning
0Normal authorization
1Special conditions (e.g., merchant approval needed)
2Normal with ID verification
3Special
4Normal with additional verification
6Normal – use for all authorizations

Third Digit – PIN Requirements & Services
DigitMeaning
0No restrictions – PIN if capable
1Normal PIN required
2PIN required for all services
3No PIN – prompt if capable
4Prompt for PIN if capable
5No PIN – services by issuer only
6PIN required for some services
7No PIN – goods/services only

Most Common Service Codes in 2025 (What You See on Real Cards)​

CodeMeaningReal-World UseSuccess Rate on Legacy Terminals
101International, normal auth, no restrictionsOld standard cardsHigh (fallback)
121International, normal auth, PIN requiredMost modern debitStandard
201International + chip preferred, normal auth, no restrictionsCommon on cloned dumpsHighest for bypass
221International + chip preferred, normal auth, PIN requiredMost credit cardsStandard
222International + chip preferred, normal auth, PIN requiredSome premium cardsStandard
601National only, normal auth, no restrictionsLegacy national cardsLow (international decline)

In carding context (2025):
  • 201 = most used for dumps – “chip preferred but no PIN” → forces fallback on old terminals
  • 221 = standard real cards – PIN required
  • 101 = old magstripe-only cards

How Terminals Read Service Codes in 2025​

  1. Terminal reads magstripe or chip
  2. Extracts service code
  3. First digit 2/6 → force chip if available (99 % of terminals do this)
  4. Third digit 1/2 → require PIN
  5. If code says “no restrictions” → higher limits possible

Why service code matters for dumps: Wrong code = terminal rejects or forces online auth → decline.

Bottom Line – December 2025​

  • 201 = best for high hits (no PIN, international)
  • 221 = real card standard (PIN required)
  • 101 = old fallback cards

Always match the service code to the combo country/bank.

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  • All 100+ possible codes + bank-specific list
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Your choice.
 
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