Skip to main content

Best credit card for students and young professionals in India

Sneha Thomas

Asked 14 May 2026

-2

I am 21, just started working with a ₹60,000/month salary. Which credit card is best to begin my credit journey with in 2026?

5 Answers

Accepted
14
Riddhi Parikh·10 Mar 2026

On the annual fee — most premium cards waive it if you spend ₹1.5L to ₹3L in the previous year. Wallet loads (Paytm, Amazon Pay balance) usually DON'T count. But utilities, fuel, and grocery do. Spend pattern matters more than absolute number.

23
Mukesh Yadav·15 Mar 2026

Short answer: no, EMI on credit card is not cheaper than a personal loan for large amounts (>₹50,000). The processing fee (~₹199-₹599) plus the interest (~14-16% reducing) usually adds up to slightly more than a personal loan rate of 11-13%. But for small-ticket EMI (₹10-20K), it is fine.

22
Aradhya Sahoo·11 May 2026

I've been a customer for 6 years. The biggest upside is the customer service. The biggest downside is the slow mobile app. If you do most banking on the app, test the app at a branch before applying — it's surprisingly old.

10
Kavita Saran·7 May 2026

Tip from someone who made this mistake: never max out the credit limit in the first 6 months. Banks track utilisation, and high utilisation right after approval often triggers a credit limit decrease or even an account review.

10
Diya Ranjan·11 May 2026

On credit limit increase: most banks auto-review every 6 months. If you use 30-70% of the limit and pay in full, you'll get an automatic increase. Don't call and ask for it explicitly — banks take it as a sign of credit hunger and sometimes lower the limit instead.

Your Answer

Sign in to post your answer and help the community.

Sign in to post

Why sign in? We moderate Q&A to keep it spam-free.