Credit Card for 18 Year old
Credit Card for 18 Year old
Author
Discussion

cashmax

Original Poster:

1,495 posts

264 months

Friday 27th January 2023
quotequote all
I'm trying to help my Daughter to get a credit card and build up her credit score as well as get the benefit of the protection they offer over a debit card. She is in full time employment, with a salary of circa 20K, lives at home and has a phone in her name. The options appear to be very limited for someone young with no history, wondered if anyone else had recently been through this and had any tips?

TwigtheWonderkid

48,191 posts

174 months

Friday 27th January 2023
quotequote all
I encouraged both my lads to get a credit card at 18, and as they both bank with Halifax, they applied for and got a Halifax Visa Card (I think it was Visa) no problems. They just use it on TFL (we're in London) and always clear it off each month, about £250 a time. Any other expenditure goes on the debit card, unless it's something where they need the additional protection.

Has she applied for her own bank's card?

Somebody

1,714 posts

107 months

Friday 27th January 2023
quotequote all
TwigtheWonderkid said:
Has she applied for her own bank's card?
This. Also try a credit builder card like Aqua.

n3il123

2,779 posts

237 months

Sunday 29th January 2023
quotequote all
Also make sure she is on the electoral roll as that will help her cause.

Panamax

8,542 posts

58 months

Sunday 29th January 2023
quotequote all
n3il123 said:
Also make sure she is on the electoral roll as that will help her cause.
^^^ This.

It's definitely essential in the real world for kids to try to get a credit card the day they turn 18. Most importantly IMO they need to be taught to,
  • Use the card regularly, and
  • Pay it off IN FULL every month.

_Rodders_

1,856 posts

43 months

Sunday 29th January 2023
quotequote all
Capital One when I was 18. £200 limit and a ridiculous APR but that didn't matter to me. Got a proper one soon after once I could.

AB

19,847 posts

219 months

Monday 30th January 2023
quotequote all
20 year old in our office just got an AMEX, I think it's a chargecard rather than a credit card, but for the same reason.

Has to be paid off each month.


Simpo Two

91,622 posts

289 months

Monday 30th January 2023
quotequote all
Boo-urns said:
Genuine question here: Is having a credit card really essential? I'm 33 and have never had one (apart from a corporate AmEx), and my credit score is 975 - 'Excellent', according to Experian. Never had a problem getting a mortgage etc.

Am I missing something? Would I stand to gain anything by getting a credit card and improving that score?
If you don't need credit you don't need a credit score.

But a CC can be useful for the protection it brings in disputes or when companies go bust.

anonymous-user

78 months

Monday 30th January 2023
quotequote all
Panamax said:
^^^ This.

It's definitely essential in the real world for kids to try to get a credit card the day they turn 18. Most importantly IMO they need to be taught to,
  • Use the card regularly, and
  • Pay it off IN FULL every month.
Why? Last thing I want when my children get to 18 is for them to have a credit card. If you only spend the money you have then you don't need one.

I have one, I very rarely use it, I only use it if I order something over £100.



outnumbered

4,812 posts

258 months

Monday 30th January 2023
quotequote all
Joey Deacon said:
Panamax said:
^^^ This.

It's definitely essential in the real world for kids to try to get a credit card the day they turn 18. Most importantly IMO they need to be taught to,
  • Use the card regularly, and
  • Pay it off IN FULL every month.
Why? Last thing I want when my children get to 18 is for them to have a credit card. If you only spend the money you have then you don't need one.

I have one, I very rarely use it, I only use it if I order something over £100.
The key part is "Pay it off IN FULL every month." You can do this with a direct debit. That way you gain a whole lot of consumer protection on every purchase that the CC company has to pay for, with absolutely no downside to you. Even better if you get a cashback/other benefit type of card. I get a few hundred quid cashback every year from mine.


cashmax

Original Poster:

1,495 posts

264 months

Monday 30th January 2023
quotequote all
Thanks for the comments. The main reason for a credit card in my view is the consumer protection they provide. I just don't understand why anyone would not want that. Of course, paying it off monthly renders the APR a complete irrelevance.

Panamax

8,542 posts

58 months

Monday 30th January 2023
quotequote all
Yes, consumer protection - and also in this crazy modern world it seems to be essential to build up some sort of positive credit record, whether or not you ever actually need to use the available facilities.

Good discipline for young-uns to learn that just because you have the ability to spend borrowed money doesn't mean you have to.

Funk

27,402 posts

233 months

Monday 30th January 2023
quotequote all
Get her registered on the following:

https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/creditclub/
https://www.clearscore.com/
https://www.creditkarma.co.uk/

MSE Credit Club allows you to see your full Experian credit file for free, Clearscore gives you your full Equifax credit file for free and Credit Karma will show your TransUnion for free (they used to be Noddle). You can also register direct with Experian, TransUnion and Equifax directly but they'll want a monthly subscription if you want to see anything other than just a 'score'. Experian, Equifax and TransUnion are the three main credit reference agencies.

The reason MSE Credit Club, Credit Karma and Clearscore can show the full report for free is because they make money from then referring people through for credit card, finance and loan applications etc. But the handy thing here is that your daughter will be able to see which credit card companies are most likely to offer her a card (she may even be pre-approved) which prevents having several hard searches on her file in a short space of time (and which might not be successful).

I keep an eye on scores every couple of months and make sure nothing's appeared on there that shouldn't have done!

Edited by Funk on Monday 30th January 16:16

cashmax

Original Poster:

1,495 posts

264 months

Tuesday 31st January 2023
quotequote all
Funk said:
Get her registered on the following:

https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/creditclub/
https://www.clearscore.com/
https://www.creditkarma.co.uk/

MSE Credit Club allows you to see your full Experian credit file for free, Clearscore gives you your full Equifax credit file for free and Credit Karma will show your TransUnion for free (they used to be Noddle). You can also register direct with Experian, TransUnion and Equifax directly but they'll want a monthly subscription if you want to see anything other than just a 'score'. Experian, Equifax and TransUnion are the three main credit reference agencies.

The reason MSE Credit Club, Credit Karma and Clearscore can show the full report for free is because they make money from then referring people through for credit card, finance and loan applications etc. But the handy thing here is that your daughter will be able to see which credit card companies are most likely to offer her a card (she may even be pre-approved) which prevents having several hard searches on her file in a short space of time (and which might not be successful).

I keep an eye on scores every couple of months and make sure nothing's appeared on there that shouldn't have done!

Edited by Funk on Monday 30th January 16:16
Thanks - did this and the first thing discovered is that she's not on the ER, which can't be helping things.

Funk

27,402 posts

233 months

Tuesday 31st January 2023
quotequote all
cashmax said:
Thanks - did this and the first thing discovered is that she's not on the ER, which can't be helping things.
Yeah, that is a significant factor!

She can register here: https://www.gov.uk/register-to-vote

I'd also personally opt out of being on the 'open register' when she registers.