Getting your first credit card can feel intimidating — especially if you’ve been told credit cards are dangerous. Used correctly, a credit card is a powerful tool that builds your credit history, earns rewards, and provides consumer protections that debit cards don’t. Here’s how to get your first one and use it right.
What to look for in a first credit card
For your first card, prioritize: no annual fee, reports to all three credit bureaus, and a straightforward approval process for limited credit history. Flashy rewards are secondary — you’re building credit first, optimizing later. Don’t apply for a premium travel card as your first card; you likely won’t qualify and the hard inquiry hurts your score.
Best first credit cards
Discover it Student Cash Back and Capital One Platinum are designed for people with limited or no credit history. The Discover it Secured card is ideal if you have no credit at all — it requires a deposit but transitions to an unsecured card after responsible use. All three are excellent starting points.
How to apply
Apply online directly through the card issuer’s website. You’ll need your Social Security number, income information (include any source of income), and employment status. Many issuers now offer pre-qualification checks that don’t affect your credit score — use these to gauge approval odds before applying officially.
The golden rules of first-time credit card use
Pay your full balance every month — never carry a balance if you can avoid it. Keep your spending below 30% of your credit limit (ideally below 10%). Set up autopay for the minimum payment as a safety net. Use the card for small, regular purchases you’d make anyway — gas, groceries, subscriptions — and pay it off immediately.
What if you’re denied?
If you’re denied, don’t apply for another card immediately — multiple rejections hurt your score. Instead, become an authorized user on a family member’s card (you get credit history without responsibility for the bill), or apply for a secured card which has much easier approval requirements.