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How credit cards actually work

Used right, a credit card builds your credit and even pays you back. Used wrong, it's the most expensive money you'll ever borrow. Here's the difference.

Dad's Quick Take

A credit card lets you borrow money short-term. If you pay the full statement balance every month, you pay zero interest and build credit. If you only pay the minimum, the leftover balance gets charged interest — often 20%+ — and that's how people get stuck.

The one rule that matters

Pay the full statement balance every month. Do that and a credit card is basically a debit card that builds your credit history and earns rewards. Set up autopay for the full balance and you literally cannot mess it up.

What the words mean

The minimum-payment trap

Pay the minimum on a $2,000 balance at 24% APR and it can take over a decade and roughly double the cost to pay off. The minimum is designed to keep you in debt, not get you out.

How it builds your credit

Every on-time payment gets reported to the credit bureaus and slowly builds your credit score — the number landlords, lenders, and sometimes employers check. Keeping your balance low and never missing a payment are the two biggest things you can do.

New to credit scores? Read 'What a credit score is and how to build one' next.

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Picking a first card

If you're starting from zero, a secured card (you put down a deposit that becomes your limit) or a student card is the usual on-ramp. Look for no annual fee. Don't chase fancy rewards yet — just build the habit of paying in full.

Common questions

Does carrying a small balance help my score?

No — that's a myth. Pay in full. What helps is using the card and paying it off, not leaving debt on it.

How many cards should I have?

One is plenty to start. Use it, pay it, and keep it open — length of history helps your score.

Is a debit card the same?

No. A debit card spends your own money and doesn't build credit. A credit card borrows and reports to the bureaus.

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