Failure to apply for a credit card does not necessarily mean there is a problem with your credit report. If you can't get a credit card, there may be a problem with your credit report, but it's not certain. Generally speaking, there are three reasons for credit card rejection:
1. Reasons for the applicant’s basic information, such as under 18 years of age, occupation that is prohibited for bank credit cards, insufficient information provided, and insufficient salary information wait.
2. Reasons for the applicant’s credit reporting, such as multiple overdue behaviors, multiple unpaid loans, etc.
3. Other reasons, such as high debt, failure to meet bank requirements, etc.
1) If applying for a credit card, the customer must be over 18 years old and have full civil capacity; and maintain Good personal credit; stable and legal sources of income and the ability to repay on time. However, if you are under 16, you will need to be accompanied by your parents. If you choose to operate a premium platinum card, there will be stricter requirements on the customer's economic and financial level. If you only apply for a savings card, there are no requirements. Customers can bring their personal ID cards to the outlets.
2) Some bad credit records will be permanently on the credit blacklist, which means that you will never be able to get a credit card and borrow a penny from the bank. For some bad credit records, after paying off the debt in full (including overdue penalties, interest and compound interest), there will be no overdue records within 5 years, and all bad records will be automatically cleared after 5 years. That is to say, you cannot apply for a credit card within 5 years, but you can apply for it after 5 years. In some cases, a credit record is perfectly fine, but a credit card cannot be processed.
3) Credit cards are divided into credit cards and quasi-credit cards. A credit card that allows you to make purchases first and then refund the money within your credit limit. A certain amount of petty cash must be deposited into a quasi-credit card. If your petty cash is not enough to cover the expenses, you can overdraw your credit card up to a specified credit limit. The difference between debit cards and credit cards: Credit cards (consumer credit products) consume first and then repay, while debit cards deposit first and use later; credit cards can be overdrafted, but debit cards cannot be overdrafted; credit cards have revolving credit limits, but debit cards have no revolving Credit limit; (Revolving credit refers to the amount approved by the bank for the cardholder. The cardholder does not need to repay the amount owed within the limit. Only the specified minimum repayment amount can maintain a good credit record and re-use it. .Cardholder’s credit limit)