Credit Card Eligibility in India (2026): Income, Age & CIBIL Requirements
Before you apply for a credit card in India, it pays to know whether you’ll actually qualify — because every rejected application can chip away at your credit score. This guide explains the eligibility criteria Indian banks look at: age, income, credit score, employment, and residency, plus what to do if you fall short.
In short: most issuers want you to be 18+ with a stable income and ideally a CIBIL score of 750+. Lower score or no income history? A secured card against a fixed deposit is the reliable route in. Check your score free with our CIBIL tool.
Age
The primary cardholder usually needs to be at least 18 years old, though some premium cards require 21+. The upper age limit for new cards is typically around 60–65, depending on the issuer and your income source. Add-on (supplementary) cards can often be issued to family members aged 18+.
Income
A stable income is the core requirement. For entry-level cards, salaried applicants often need a minimum monthly income in the region of ₹15,000–₹25,000, while premium and super-premium cards expect substantially higher income. Self-employed applicants qualify based on business income shown through ITR. The exact threshold varies by card and city — always check the specific card’s stated minimum.
Credit score (CIBIL)
Your CIBIL score (300–900) is one of the biggest factors. A score of 750 or above gives the best approval odds and access to better cards. Some entry cards consider applicants around 700+. If your score is low, thin, or non-existent (new to credit), a secured credit card issued against a fixed deposit is usually approved with little regard to score and helps you build history. See our rejection recovery guide if you’ve been declined.
Employment & profile
Banks assess whether you’re salaried or self-employed, your employer/company profile, job stability, and existing debts. A steady job with a reputable employer or a well-documented business strengthens your application. Too many existing loans/cards or high credit utilisation can work against you even with a good score.
Residency & documentation
You generally need to be an Indian resident with a valid PAN and KYC documents. NRIs and OCIs can get cards through specific products or against deposits — see our NRI/OCI credit cards guide. The documents you’ll need are covered in our documents required guide.
Typical eligibility at a glance
| Criterion | Typical requirement |
|---|---|
| Age (primary) | 18+ (some cards 21+), up to ~60–65 |
| Income (entry cards) | ~₹15,000–₹25,000/month salaried (varies) |
| CIBIL score | 750+ ideal; 700+ for some entry cards |
| Low / no score | Secured card against FD |
| Residency | Indian resident (NRIs via specific cards) |
What if you don’t qualify yet?
If your income or score falls short, build toward eligibility: take a secured card against an FD and use it responsibly, keep utilisation low, pay in full and on time, and avoid multiple applications. Students and first-jobbers have tailored options — see our students & first-job cards and beginner cards guides.
FAQs
What is the minimum income for a credit card in India?
Entry cards often start around ₹15,000–₹25,000/month for salaried applicants, but it varies by card and city. Premium cards need much higher income.
Can I get a credit card with a low CIBIL score?
Yes — a secured credit card against a fixed deposit is typically approved regardless of score and helps rebuild it.
What is the minimum age for a credit card?
Usually 18 for the primary cardholder (some cards 21+); add-on cards are also available from 18.
Do I need income proof to qualify?
For unsecured cards, usually yes. Secured cards and some pre-approved offers don’t require fresh income proof.
Explore more: how to apply · documents required · check your CIBIL · find your card.
Sources & references
- Official bank credit-card eligibility pages; CIBIL/credit-bureau guidance; RBI norms
- CreditSmart independent card reviews — verified June 2026
Verified June 2026. Income, age and score requirements vary by issuer and card and change over time — confirm the specific card’s criteria on the bank’s official site before applying. Figures shown are typical ranges for guidance only.