Cod.org is an organization that believes everyone deserves to learn computer science. Imagine a classroom in which kids build games rather than playing them.
Ever since the company started its operations, they have been making coding easy and fun. The platform is best for students who do not get enough chances.
Their free courses and Hour of Code are popular, they’re showing the world that coding is for everyone. The idea is to open doors and work on problem solving.
Code.org frequently partners up with big tech and educational institutions ensure everyone has the tools they need to succeed.
Give a gift that truly matters: a Code.org gift card. It’s not a card with a balance, but a donation in someone's name. It means you’re helping Code.org bring computer science to more students and teachers.
The person you gift it to gets an e-card saying you’ve supported coding education. It helps fund free lessons, teacher training, and getting schools to teach computer science.
A selection of the most popular gift cards, tailored for you.
Check out our Knowledge Base for self-help articles and more FAQs.
Think of it like a secret cheat code—Code.org doesn’t sell gift cards directly, but third-party heroes like Send Credit do! Snag one there and gift coding magic to your future-dev-in-training.
Amazon’s got Code.org merch (think tees, mugs, nerd vibes), but gift cards? Those are trickier. Some third-party sellers list them, but double-check the fine print—scammers love a good “404: Gift Card Not Found.”
Cue sad trombone—nope, they’re not free. But hey, neither is that fancy coffee fueling your all-night coding sessions. Grab one from Send Credit or similar sites—because genius shouldn’t cost too much.
Code.org’s like that cool teacher who’s all “learn for free!”—they don’t sell gift cards directly. But Send Credit and other platforms have your back. It’s like finding an Easter egg in a tutorial.
Think of it like a secret cheat code—Code.org doesn’t sell gift cards directly, but third-party heroes like Send Credit do! Snag one there and gift coding magic to your future-dev-in-training.
Cue sad trombone—nope, they’re not free. But hey, neither is that fancy coffee fueling your all-night coding sessions. Grab one from Send Credit or similar sites—because genius shouldn’t cost too much.
Amazon’s got Code.org merch (think tees, mugs, nerd vibes), but gift cards? Those are trickier. Some third-party sellers list them, but double-check the fine print—scammers love a good “404: Gift Card Not Found.”
Code.org’s like that cool teacher who’s all “learn for free!”—they don’t sell gift cards directly. But Send Credit and other platforms have your back. It’s like finding an Easter egg in a tutorial.
Our friendly customer support team is only a message away.