10 Common Credit Card Mistakes That Cost Indians Real Money
Paying only the minimum, missing payments, closing old cards — the mistakes that add up to thousands in lost rewards and fees.
Tanvi Deshpande
Beginner-friendly explainers. Translates the bank's T&Cs into plain English for first-card users.
The 10 most common mistakes
Most Indian credit-card holders make at least a few of these mistakes every year. Some cost real money; others cost credit score. The good news: every mistake is fixable.
Mistake 1: paying only the minimum amount due
The cost: finance charges of 42%–51% per annum on the carried balance.
The minimum amount due is typically 5% of the outstanding balance or a flat ₹200–₹500, whichever is higher. Paying this avoids the late fee but finance charges continue to compound.
A ₹50,000 balance paid as only the minimum each cycle costs ₹2,000+ in interest per month. Over 12 months: ₹24,000+.
The fix: pay the full statemented balance. Set up auto-pay.
Mistake 2: missing the payment due date
The cost: ₹500–₹1,200 late fee + damaged credit score.
Missing the due date once drops your CIBIL score 50–100 points. Multiple misses compound the damage.
The fix: set up auto-pay for the full statemented balance. The bank will pay on time, every time.
Mistake 3: maxing out the credit limit
The cost: 30%+ drop in your CIBIL score + potential over-limit fees.
Credit utilisation (balance ÷ limit) is 30% of your CIBIL score. Above 30% utilisation is a red flag.
The fix: keep your balance below 30% of your limit. Pay before the statement date if needed. Request a credit-limit increase if your limit is too low.
Mistake 4: taking a cash advance
The cost: 2.5%–3.5% cash advance fee + 2.5%–3.5% per month interest from day one.
A ₹50,000 cash advance costs ₹1,750 in fees + ₹1,750 in first-month interest + GST on both = ₹4,130+. And the grace period doesn't apply.
The fix: use a debit card at ATMs or a personal loan for cash. Reserve credit cards for purchases.
Mistake 5: closing your oldest card
The cost: 10–30 point drop in CIBIL score due to shortened credit history.
Your oldest credit card is your "credit age" anchor. Closing it shortens your average credit history.
The fix: keep your oldest card active. A small monthly charge (₹100 utility bill) is enough to keep it active.
Mistake 6: applying for too many cards in a short window
The cost: 20–50 point drop in CIBIL score per application.
Each credit-card application is a hard inquiry. Three applications in 30 days can drop your score 50+ points.
The fix: apply for credit cards sparingly. Wait 3–6 months between applications.
Mistake 7: not reading the monthly statement
The cost: missed fraud, missed fee reversals, missed errors.
A 5-minute statement review catches most issues early. Most cardholders never read the statement.
The fix: set a calendar reminder on the day after your statement cuts. Spend 5 minutes reviewing.
Mistake 8: paying only the minimum to maintain credit score
The myth: "Carrying a small balance improves your credit score."
The reality: this is false. The credit score rewards on-time payments and low utilisation. Carrying a balance costs interest without improving the score.
The fix: pay in full. The credit score doesn't need a carried balance.
Mistake 9: not using the rewards
The cost: 1%–5% of your annual spend left on the table.
Most cards have reward balances that expire (HDFC doesn't expire; Axis EDGE expires in 24 months; Amex MR expires in 36 months). If you don't redeem, the rewards lapse.
The fix: set a quarterly reminder to redeem rewards. Transfer points to airline partners if you can find award inventory; otherwise statement credit.
Mistake 10: not requesting fee waivers
The cost: ₹500–₹5,000 per year in unnecessary fees.
Annual fees are routinely waived for active customers. Late fees are often waived as a goodwill gesture for first-time occurrences.
The fix: call customer care and request waivers politely. Most requests succeed.
The total cost of these mistakes
If you're making 3–4 of these mistakes per year, the cost is roughly:
- Finance charge: ₹5,000–₹15,000/year on carried balances.
- Late fees: ₹500–₹1,200 per missed payment × 2–3 = ₹1,500–₹3,600/year.
- Cash advance fees: ₹2,000–₹5,000/year if occasional.
- Foregone rewards: 1%–2% of ₹3L spend = ₹3,000–₹6,000/year.
- Total: ₹11,500–₹29,600/year.
For a household with two cards, double this. The cost of common mistakes is often ₹25,000–₹60,000/year.
The discipline fix
Set up:
- Auto-pay for the full statemented balance (avoids late fees and finance charges).
- Alerts for every transaction (catches fraud early).
- A monthly review of your statement (catches errors and unfamiliar merchants).
- A quarterly reward redemption (avoids expiry).
- An annual fee waiver call (saves the annual fee for active customers).
These 5 habits, automated, eliminate 80% of common credit-card mistakes.
The 10 mistakes, summarised
- Paying only the minimum.
- Missing the due date.
- Maxing the credit limit.
- Taking cash advances.
- Closing the oldest card.
- Applying for too many cards.
- Not reading the statement.
- Believing in carried balance = better score.
- Not redeeming rewards.
- Not requesting waivers.
Avoid these mistakes and your credit-card cost drops to ₹0 (apart from annual fees you choose to pay).
The bottom line
Common credit-card mistakes cost Indians thousands of rupees every year. The mistakes are predictable and fixable. Set up auto-pay, enable alerts, read the statement, redeem rewards quarterly, and request waivers. The discipline: 30 minutes of setup eliminates 80% of mistakes; 30 minutes a month of review catches the rest. The annual savings: ₹10,000–₹30,000 for a typical household.