A friend of mine got rejected for a home loan in Pune last year. The reason? One missed credit card payment from 2022. He had cleared it three weeks late but the delay still reflected in his credit history and affected his loan eligibility. That single slip cost him a higher interest rate and huge damage over the years.
The reason is your CIBIL score.
Today, many Indians use credit cards, but very few understand how strongly credit card habits can affect their credit profile. Very few understand how it shapes their CIBIL score. In this guide, we will break down the five exact ways your credit card affects your CIBIL score. No fluff. Just the real factors that decide whether banks say yes or no.
By the end, you will know which habits build a 750+ score, which ones quietly drag you down, and when to apply, keep, or close a credit card.
What Is a CIBIL Score
Your CIBIL score is a three-digit number between 300 and 900 that shows how responsibly you have handled credit in the past. It is generated by TransUnion CIBIL, one of India’s major credit bureaus, based on the credit information reported by banks and lenders.
Banks, NBFCs and credit card companies often check your CIBIL score before approving a loan or credit card. A higher score usually shows lower credit risk, while a lower score may make approval difficult or lead to stricter terms.
A score above 750 is generally considered strong by many lenders. While a score below 650 reduces your chances of approval, increases documentation checks, or affects the interest rate you are offered.
Your CIBIL score is influenced by factors such as:
| Factor | Weight (approx.) | What It Measures |
|---|---|---|
| Payment History | 35% | Whether you pay your bills on time |
| Credit Utilisation | 30% | How much of your total limit you are using |
| Credit History Length | 15% | How long your accounts have been active |
| Credit Mix | 10% | The variety of credit you handle, cards plus loans |
| New Credit Inquiries | 10% | How often you apply for new credit |
How Credit Card Helps Build CIBIL Faster?
A credit card can help build your CIBIL score because it creates regular repayment data. Every billing cycle shows how you use credit, how much limit you consume, and whether you pay on time.
When used properly, a credit card can improve your credit profile by building a clean payment history, keeping credit utilisation low, adding to your credit age, and showing lenders that you can manage unsecured credit responsibly.
But the same card can also damage your score if you miss payments, max out your limit, apply for too many cards, or close old cards without thinking. That is why your credit card behaviour can have a strong impact on your CIBIL score over time.
How Often Your CIBIL Report Updates in 2026
Until December 2024, lenders sent your credit data to bureaus once a month. That meant a missed payment in the first week might only hit your score five weeks later. The wait time has now shrunk.
Two things have changed:
- From January 1, 2025, all banks and NBFCs must report credit data every 15 days, on the 15th and last day of each month. This is already in force.
- From July 1, 2026, the cycle moves to weekly reporting. Lenders will submit data on the 9th, 16th, 23rd and last day of every month.
What this means for you: good behaviour shows up faster, and so does bad. Pay off a big chunk on the 3rd of the month and your utilisation drops in the report by the 15th, not five weeks later. Miss a payment and the damage hits your CIBIL file inside two weeks.
The 5 Ways Credit Cards Affect Your CIBIL Score
1. Payment History: The Single Biggest Factor (35%)
Pay your bill in full, on time, every month. That one habit drives more than a third of your score. Miss a payment and the damage is fast and lasting.
Indian banks treat late payments in tiers. Here is what actually happens at each stage:
| Days Late | What Happens | CIBIL Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 1 to 7 days | Bank charges a late fee of ₹500 to ₹1,300 based on outstanding amount | Usually none |
| 8 to 29 days | Late fee compounds. Bank flags your account internally. | Small drop |
| 30+ days | Reported to CIBIL as a delinquent account | Sharp drop of 50 to 100 points |
| 90+ days | Account moves to default status | Severe damage. Loan rejections likely. |
Paying only the minimum amount due is a trap. Say your bill is ₹50,000 and you pay the ₹2,500 minimum. The bank does not call you a defaulter. But the remaining ₹47,500 keeps earning interest at 3.5% per month. That is 42% per year. Your utilisation also stays high, which hurts you in a second way.
Recovery is slow but possible. Six to twelve months of on-time payments will start moving the needle back up.
2. Credit Utilisation Ratio (30%)
Credit utilisation is the percent of your total credit limit you are using. Have a ₹1 lakh limit and spend ₹40,000? Your utilisation is 40%.
Keep this number under 30%. CIBIL treats anything above that as a sign you are stretching your finances. Above 50%, your score takes a real hit. At 75% or higher, the damage is significant even if you pay on time.
Here is the part most people miss. CIBIL looks at your utilisation on the statement date, not after you pay. Spend ₹90,000 on a ₹1 lakh card and pay it off in full a week later? Your statement still shows 90% utilisation. The score still drops.
Two ways to fix this fast:
- Pay your card before the statement date, not just before the due date
- Ask your bank for a credit limit increase. Higher limit, same spend, lower ratio.
And remember, this is aggregate utilisation. If you have three cards with a total limit of ₹3 lakh and ₹90,000 spread across them, your total ratio is 30%. That is the number the bureau cares about.
3. Length of Credit History (15%)
Older accounts help your score. CIBIL looks at the average age of all your active credit accounts. A five-year-old card pulls the average up. A six-month-old one drags it down.
This is why closing your oldest card is usually a bad move. Say you have a card from 2018 and one from 2024. Close the 2018 card and your average credit age drops from 4 years to under 1 year. Score drops with it.
First-time card users face a different problem. CIBIL needs at least six months of activity before it can even calculate a score. Without that history, your loan application gets pushed into the manual review pile.
4. Credit Mix (10%)
Banks like to see that you can handle different kinds of debt. Credit cards are revolving credit. Home loans, car loans and personal loans are instalment credit. A mix of both signals you are an experienced borrower.
Three credit cards and no loan history will get you to 770 or so. Adding a small personal loan or a two-wheeler loan and paying it off cleanly can push you to 800+.
Do not take a loan just for the score. The point is that a healthy credit profile usually has more than one type of credit.
5. New Credit Inquiries (10%)
Every time you apply for a new credit card, the bank checks your CIBIL report. That is called a hard inquiry. It costs you 5 to 10 points each time.
One inquiry is no big deal. Five inquiries in three months is a red flag. Banks call it credit-hungry behaviour. They assume you are short on cash and applying everywhere.
Hard inquiries stay on your report for 24 months. But the score impact fades after 3 to 6 months, as long as you do not pile on more.
There is a smarter way. Most banks now offer pre-approval checks on their website. These are soft inquiries. They tell you your chances without touching your score. Always check eligibility before submitting a full application.
Credit Card Habits That Quietly Hurt Your CIBIL Score
Paying Only the Minimum Amount Due
The minimum due is usually 5% of your bill. Pay just that and the bank keeps charging 3.5% interest per month on the rest. A ₹50,000 balance unpaid for a year balloons to over ₹75,000. Your utilisation stays high the entire time. The score keeps sliding.
Withdrawing Cash from Your Credit Card
Cash advances are the most expensive money you can borrow. Interest starts the day you withdraw. No grace period. The bank also charges a transaction fee of 2.5% to 3% of the amount. Pull out ₹20,000 and you owe ₹500 to ₹600 before you even leave the ATM.
Banks see frequent cash withdrawals as a distress signal. It hurts your score and makes lenders cautious about giving you more credit later.
Closing a Credit Card the Wrong Way
Closing a card looks harmless. It is not. You lose that card’s credit limit, which spikes your utilisation across the remaining cards. You also lose its age, which drags your average credit history down.
If a card has no annual fee, leave it open. Make one small purchase every three months to keep it active.
Letting a Card Sit Unused
Banks watch for dormant cards. After six to twelve months of zero activity, they may reduce your limit or close the card without telling you. Either move can hurt your score overnight.
Fix this with one small spend per quarter. A ₹200 OTT subscription auto-debit is enough.
How Multiple Credit Cards Affect Your CIBIL Score
More cards do not automatically mean a lower score. What matters is how you manage them. Two or three cards is the sweet spot for most people in India.
The upside is real. Three cards with ₹1 lakh limits each gives you a ₹3 lakh total limit. Spend ₹60,000 a month across them and your utilisation is 20%. Excellent. With one card of ₹1 lakh and same spending of ₹60,000 a month, the spends pushes to 60%. Score drops.
The downside is also real. Three cards means three due dates, three statements, and three chances to miss something. Set up auto-pay on all of them or pick one date and pay everything together.
One rule that helps: never apply for two cards within three months of each other. The cluster of hard inquiries will cost you more points than the extra limit gives back.
Should You Apply, Keep, or Close a Card? A Simple Framework
Most articles tell you the rules. They do not tell you when to act. Here is a clean framework.
| Action | Apply only if | Avoid if |
|---|---|---|
| Apply | Your utilisation is above 30% and you have not applied in the last 6 months | You already have 3 active cards or applied recently |
| Keep | No annual fee, or the rewards beat the fee, or it is your oldest card | The annual fee is wasted and you have a better card |
| Close | Annual fee with no offset and the card is newer than your oldest | It is your oldest card or closing spikes your utilisation above 50% |
Before closing any card, calculate what your new utilisation will look like. If closing a ₹1 lakh limit card will push your ratio from 25% to 45%, do not close it. The score hit is not worth the saved fee.
How to Build a 750+ CIBIL Score With Your Credit Card
Knowing what affects your CIBIL score is only half the job. The next step is building the right credit card habits consistently. Here are the habits that can help:
- Set up auto-pay for the full bill, not the minimum due. This helps you avoid missed payments and interest charges.
- Keep your utilisation under 30% per card and overall. Using a smaller part of your total limit shows better credit discipline.
- Use every active card occasionally. A small purchase once in a while keeps the card active and builds repayment history.
- Check your CIBIL report once a year. You can get one free CIBIL Score & Report once per calendar year from TransUnion CIBIL.
- Dispute any errors on your report straight away. Wrong overdue amounts, closed accounts shown as active, or incorrect personal details can hurt your score.
- Wait at least 6 months between new card applications. Too many applications in a short time can make you look credit-hungry.
Do these six things consistently, and your CIBIL score will have a much better chance of moving towards the 750+ range over time. The exact timeline depends on your current score, repayment history, open loans, and credit report accuracy.
FAQs
How long does a missed credit card payment stay on my CIBIL report?
A missed credit card payment can stay visible on your CIBIL report for 36 months. TransUnion CIBIL also says it can affect your score for up to 2 years, although it remains part of your credit history.
Does checking my own CIBIL score lower it?
No. Checking your own score is a soft inquiry. Soft inquiries do not affect your score. You can check as often as you like.
How many points does a hard inquiry drop my CIBIL score?
There is no fixed point drop for a hard inquiry. One inquiry may have a small impact, but multiple applications in a short time can lower your CIBIL score and reduce your approval chances.
Will closing a credit card immediately lower my score?
It often does. You lose that card’s credit limit, which raises your overall utilisation. You also lose its age, which shortens your average credit history. The impact is bigger if it is your oldest card.
Can a credit card improve my CIBIL score if I have no credit history?
Yes. A credit card is the fastest way to build a score from zero. Use it for small monthly spends, pay in full, and you will have a score within 6 months. After 12 months of clean use, you can reach 730 to 750.
What is the ideal credit utilisation ratio in India?
The ideal credit utilisation ratio in India is generally below 30% of your total available credit limit. A lower ratio is usually better, but do not treat 10% as a guaranteed shortcut to an 800+ CIBIL score.
Does paying my credit card bill twice in a month help my score?
It can. Paying once before your statement date and once before the due date keeps your reported balance low. That is what CIBIL sees. A lower reported balance means lower utilisation and a better score.
The Verdict
Credit cards are not the problem. Bad habits are. Pay in full, keep utilisation low, stop chasing new cards, and your CIBIL score will look after itself.
The reader who got rejected for a home loan? He has cleaned up his act since. He pays before the statement date, never withdraws cash, and has not applied for a new card in 18 months. His score is back at 781. The next home loan application will look very different.
Disclaimer
The information in this article is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal or investment advice. CIBIL score factors, RBI reporting timelines and bank charges referenced here are based on rules in force as of May 2026 and may change. Always check with your bank or a qualified financial advisor before making decisions based on this content. Great.cards does not guarantee any specific credit score outcome.