Honestly, almost any PIN is probably fine so long as you don’t have it written on the back of the card or something. Cards get locked after like 3 failed attempts, so the number itself doesn’t have to be unique or rare.
Hell - even if you gave them the first digit and the thief could eliminate 90 percent of of the remaining numbers based on probabilities, the thief would still have less than a 1:30 chance of getting the right combination before the card was locked.
Honestly, almost any PIN is probably fine so long as you don’t have it written on the back of the card or something. Cards get locked after like 3 failed attempts, so the number itself doesn’t have to be unique or rare.
Hell - even if you gave them the first digit and the thief could eliminate 90 percent of of the remaining numbers based on probabilities, the thief would still have less than a 1:30 chance of getting the right combination before the card was locked.