Before you get a credit card, understand one rule: if you can’t pay the full balance every month, a credit card will cost you far more than it rewards you. Credit cards are tools for building credit and earning rewards — but only when used correctly.

Things to Know Before Applying

# Key Point Why It Matters
1 Always pay the full balance monthly Interest on carried balances negates all rewards
2 Know the APR before you spend 20-30% interest makes everything cost more
3 Credit utilization matters Keep balances under 30% of your limit (under 10% is ideal)
4 Annual fees must be justified by rewards A $95 fee card must return $95+ in value
5 Sign-up bonuses have spending requirements Don’t overspend to hit a bonus threshold
6 Each application is a hard inquiry Drops score 5-10 points temporarily
7 Set up autopay for at least the minimum Never miss a payment — late payments devastate credit

Types of Credit Cards

Card Type Best For Annual Fee Typical Rewards
Cash back (flat rate) Everyday spending $0 1.5-2% on everything
Cash back (category) Maximizers $0 3-5% on rotating categories
Travel rewards Frequent travelers $95-$695 2-5x points on travel/dining
Store cards Specific retailer shoppers $0 5-10% at one store only
Secured cards Building/rebuilding credit $0-$49 Minimal; purpose is credit building
Student cards First credit card $0 1-2% cash back
Balance transfer Paying off existing debt $0 0% APR for 12-21 months

How Credit Card Interest Works

Scenario Monthly Payment Months to Pay Off Total Interest Paid
$3,000 balance, 24% APR, minimum payments ~$75 60+ months $1,500+
$3,000 balance, 24% APR, $150/month $150 24 months $730
$3,000 balance, 24% APR, paid in full $3,000 1 month $0

Paying the minimum on a $3,000 balance costs you an extra $1,500+ in interest.

Credit Utilization Impact on Score

Utilization Rate Credit Score Impact Example ($10,000 total limit)
0% Neutral (some models penalize) $0 balance
1-9% Best $100-$900 balance
10-29% Good $1,000-$2,900 balance
30-49% Fair — score starts dropping $3,000-$4,900 balance
50-74% Poor $5,000-$7,400 balance
75%+ Worst $7,500+ balance

Choosing Your First (or Next) Card

Your Situation Best Card Type
No credit history Secured card or student card
Building credit (score 580-669) Basic cash back with no annual fee
Good credit (670-739) Mid-tier rewards card
Excellent credit (740+) Premium rewards card with sign-up bonus
Carrying a balance 0% APR balance transfer card
One specific store you love Store card (only if you’d shop there anyway)

Common Credit Card Mistakes

Mistake Consequence
Paying only the minimum Years of interest; debt grows
Maxing out the card Credit score drops; interest compounds
Missing a payment Late fee + 29.99% penalty APR + credit score damage
Getting a card for the sign-up bonus then overspending Debt that costs more than the bonus
Applying for too many cards at once Multiple hard inquiries; score drops
Only paying attention to rewards rate Ignoring APR, fees, and spending habits
Closing old cards Reduces credit history length and available credit

The Bottom Line

A credit card is not free money — it’s a short-term loan that costs 20-30% interest if you don’t pay in full. Used correctly (full payment monthly, low utilization, autopay enabled), credit cards build your credit score and earn rewards. Used incorrectly, they create a debt spiral that takes years to escape. Start with one no-annual-fee card, set up autopay, and never charge more than you can pay off in full.

Related: Before You Apply for a Credit Card | Before You Close a Credit Card