Facebook can repeatedly ask you to add a new payment method even when your current one seems fine because its billing system has strict risk and verification checks. Common reasons include:
Failed Authorization Holds
Even if your card is valid, Facebook sometimes runs small “pre-authorization” charges to confirm it can bill you. If your bank blocks or delays these, Facebook flags it.
Exceeded Billing Threshold
New ad accounts start with a low billing threshold (e.g., $25–$50). If you hit it too quickly or go over your set limit before the billing cycle ends, Facebook may require an additional card to reduce risk.
Card Type or Country Mismatch
If your card’s billing country or currency doesn’t match your Facebook Ads account settings, the system may request an alternate payment source.
High-Risk Account Triggers
Sudden spikes in daily spend, launching multiple new campaigns, or running in certain high-risk industries can prompt Facebook to require a secondary payment method as a safeguard.
Temporary Bank Issues
Even a brief downtime in your bank’s payment processor can cause Facebook to mark the payment as “failed” and request another method.
Fraud Prevention Flags
If your card was ever linked to another Facebook account with a history of late payments or disputes, Facebook might preemptively ask for a backup.
If this keeps happening:
Make sure your card allows international transactions and has sufficient credit available.
Clear any outstanding balance immediately.
Contact your bank to whitelist Facebook’s billing processor.
Add a secondary payment method proactively so your ads don’t get paused.