How to Get a Credit Card for the First Time

Your first credit card is one of the most useful financial tools you can have — if you pick the right one and use it correctly. Here’s everything you need to know to get started the right way.

What to look for in a first credit card

  • No annual fee. Your first card should cost you nothing to have. There are plenty of great no-fee options — don’t pay just to build credit.
  • Reports to all three bureaus. This is non-negotiable. The whole point is to build your credit history. Confirm the card reports to Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion.
  • No foreign transaction fees if you travel at all.
  • Cash back or rewards. Even a starter card can earn you something back on spending you’d do anyway.

Best first credit cards

  • Discover It Student Cash Back. 5% cash back in rotating categories, no annual fee, Discover matches all your cash back at the end of your first year. Great for students.
  • Chase Freedom Unlimited. 1.5% cash back on everything, no annual fee. Simple and reliable.
  • Capital One Quicksilver Student. 1.5% cash back, no annual fee, designed for students with limited credit history.
  • Secured cards if you have no credit history yet — see our secured card guide.

How to use it correctly from day one

Pick one small recurring expense — a streaming subscription, your phone bill, or weekly groceries. Put only that on the card. Set up autopay for the full statement balance every month. Check your balance once a week. That’s it. You’re building excellent credit habits that compound over years.

The one rule that keeps people out of trouble

Never charge more than you have sitting in your checking account right now. A credit card is not extra money — it’s a tool that moves money you already have. Treat it like a debit card you pay off every month and you’ll never pay interest, never damage your credit, and earn free rewards on spending you were doing anyway.

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