Visa which works in the digital payments area and the official Partner of FIFA, recently announced a FIFA World Cup 2026 association with HDFC Bank, a private sector bank. As part of this partnership, Visa and HDFC Bank launched a limited‑edition FIFA World Cup 2026 Visa Pixel Credit Card, alongside an exclusive nationwide Spend & Win campaign—bringing Indian consumers closer to the world’s most anticipated global sporting spectacle.
The announcement was celebrated at a launch event in Mumbai, marked by the presence of football icon Michael Owen.
The only limited edition FIFA World Cup 2026 Visa Pixel Credit Card, HDFC Bank’s digital‑first, app‑based credit card, is designed for new‑age digital consumers – offering instant issuance, flexible customisations, and seamless digital payments. The FIFA-themed card fascia will be available to existing HDFC Bank Pixel Play customers in addition to new Pixel Play applicants from April 11th onwards.
FIFA association across HDFC Bank’s payments portfolio
This association now enables a chance to watch a FIFA World Cup 2026 match live for customers of HDFC Bank across all card portfolios including Credit Cards, Debit Cards, and Business Cards.
Powered by Visa’s long‑standing global partnership with FIFA and Visa’s secure, widely accepted payments network, the initiative transforms everyday payments into memorable football experiences.
Medianews4u.com caught up with Rishi Chhabra, Country Manager, Visa India
Q. What trends are you seeing among aspirational Indian consumers? Is this opportunity growing?
What’s changed most in India is the definition of aspiration. It’s no longer about owning more it’s about experiencing more. We’re seeing strong momentum around travel, dining, global lifestyle brands and experiences that signal arrival, not affordability. What’s interesting is that this shift is not limited to metros anymore. Aspirational consumption is becoming more confident, more digital and more global across tier‑2 and tier‑3 India as well. From our lens, this is a long‑term growth opportunity, not a short-term spike.

Q. How is Visa strengthening its two-tier strategy with Visa Signature and Visa Infinite?
At Visa, we’re very clear that affluence isn’t one-size-fits-all. Visa Signature speaks to emerging affluent consumers who are upgrading their lifestyles travelling more, shopping globally and expecting everyday relevance with premium access. Visa Infinite caters to a very different mindset UHNI and HNI consumers who value curation, privacy and bespoke experiences. Our strategy is to serve both segments meaningfully, with security and trust as the foundation, and differentiation coming from the experiences we enable.
Q. How does Indian card behaviour compare with global markets?
Globally, consumers want speed and simplicity and India matches that expectation. What’s unique here is how payment behaviours co‑exist. Indians are comfortable switching rails depending on context. Smaller, frequent payments may happen through real time payments, but high‑value categories like travel, hospitality and premium retail are increasingly card-led. Indian consumers are also very outcome-driven they don’t chase discounts as much as relevant benefits and seamless experiences.
Q. How does behavioural segmentation help Visa and its partners grow?
Behavioural segmentation helps us move beyond broad labels and focus on intent. When you understand how, when and where consumers actually spend, you can deliver far more relevant propositions. For our issuer and merchant partners, this translates into higher engagement, stronger preference and better share of wallet, rather than just volume acquisition. Relevance, today, is the real growth driver.
Q. Is aspirational messaging a key marketing focus across wealth journeys?
Absolutely. In India, aspiration is deeply emotional it’s about belonging and participation. Our role as a brand is not limited to enabling payments; it’s about showing up at moments that matter. Whether someone is stepping into affluence or already there, enabling aspirational buying helps us remain relevant across that journey. It’s less about status and more about access, confidence and trust.
Q. Will Visa continue to prioritise digital media in 2026? What about budgets?
Digital will continue to play a critical role because it allows us to be precise, contextual and measurable. That said, we don’t look at digital in isolation. Culture-led platforms sports, music, large-scale experiences remain equally important for the brand identity.

Q. What kind of marketing innovations can we expect next from Visa? How is AI shaping Visa’s approach from marketing to fintech innovation?
Right now, we’re spending a lot of time in research, analytics and understanding consumer behaviours. We are working with different partners to make utilising AI faster, easier and more holistic. This includes running measurement, understanding consumer insights and developing campaigns.
We choose not to map transaction data to individuals because of data security, so we have to get the consumer to opt-in for first party data. We leverage our event and activations to get consumers’ permission to access their first party data and optimise our marketing approach.
With first party data and an AI engine, we can build a predictive model to understand how similar cohorts of customers are likely to behave. So, if your behaviour shows that you are likely to travel in the next three months to a concert then we want to make sure we send you the right information at the right time.
Q. Why does sport work so well for Visa from IPL to FIFA and the Olympics?
Sport is one of the most powerful real‑world tests of trust. These moments compress emotion, movement and spending into short windows and payments simply have to work. Visa doesn’t just badge sporting events; we enable the entire ecosystem around the fan journey, from transit and food to cross‑border spending.
In India, properties like the IPL deliver massive cultural relevance, while global platforms like FIFA and the Olympics reinforce our reliability at scale. Visa has been a partner to the FIFA World Cup for many years and has a long-term partnership with Olympics. We look at FIFA from a passion and fandom standpoint which creates many opportunities for us as a payment partner to demonstrate our value. Fans will travel for the games and there is no better opportunity for us to showcase our wide acceptance network and global operations.
Q. How is Visa working with the creator economy?
We see creators as economic participants, not just communication channels. Finfluencers and lifestyle creators today behave like small businesses earning globally, monetising across platforms and managing real financial flows. Visa’s role is to help them participate safely and seamlessly in the global economy, rather than just partner with them for reach.
As per Visa’s Monetised: Visa 2025 Creator Report, the creator economy is a growing category of small business, with approximately 207 million creators worldwide. This segment is projected to be valued at half a trillion dollars by 2027.
Creators also want a platform where they can get mentored and work with other creators. So, we provided a community that brought creators together so they can ask other creators and platforms to teach them how to improve their content. We host a creator summit in the APAC region where creators travel from South Asia and the community comes together and interacts with world creators. We organise this and get industry partners, top designers and top creator platforms like Tik Tok and RedNote to address the summit. This helps them up their game and do more innovative content.
We also work with our partners such as banks to build their strategy around creators and bring our expertise and creator connect. This is a win-win because creators get work and brands have access to the best creators. We have partnered with HDFC Bank to support 60 million SMBs in India including creators.

Q. What role does predictive analytics play in travel, dining and hospitality?
Predictive analytics helps us understand intent ahead of the transaction, not just after the fact. This enables more relevant propositions airport privileges, destination benefits, dining access at exactly the right time. The focus is on reducing friction and increasing confidence for consumers when they spend.
















