Credit Card Utilisation Ratio: What It Is and Why It Matters

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If you’re applying for a loan, a new credit card, or even a rental agreement that checks CIBIL, your credit utilisation ratio is one of the biggest levers you can pull — and most Indians optimise it wrong.

What is credit utilisation ratio?

Credit utilisation = your total outstanding balance ÷ your total credit limit. It’s expressed as a percentage.

Example: you have two cards with ₹50,000 limit each (₹1L total) and your outstanding balance across both is ₹30,000. Your utilisation is 30%.

Why it matters

CIBIL weighs utilisation as ~30% of your credit score calculation — second only to payment history. A sustained high utilisation (>70%) can drop your score by 50–100 points over 6 months, even if you pay every bill on time.

The sweet spot

  • Under 30%: ideal. Lenders see you as using credit responsibly with room to spare.
  • 30–50%: acceptable but not optimal.
  • 50–75%: score starts dropping.
  • Above 75%: red flag for lenders. Avoid this except in emergencies.

How to lower utilisation fast

  1. Pay before the statement date. Your bank reports the outstanding on the statement date, not the due date. Pay down the balance before statement = lower reported utilisation.
  2. Request a limit increase. A ₹20,000 balance on a ₹50K limit = 40% utilisation. Same balance on a ₹1L limit = 20%. Ask for an increase every 9–12 months.
  3. Spread spend across cards. Don’t max one card. A ₹40K balance split across two ₹50K cards = 40% per card. Same total on one card = 80% utilisation.
  4. Don’t close old cards. Closing reduces your total available credit — pushing utilisation up even if your spend stayed the same.

The per-card utilisation trap

CIBIL also looks at utilisation PER CARD. If your overall utilisation is 25% but one card is at 95%, the high card still drops your score. Balance across cards.

What doesn’t affect utilisation

  • Your reward points earned
  • Paying the minimum vs. full bill (both reduce utilisation if paid before next statement)
  • Debit card transactions (don’t count — no credit involved)
The 30% rule: target credit utilisation below 30% always, well below if you’re about to apply for a major loan (home, car). Pay down the balance 5–7 days before your statement date — that’s the single biggest CIBIL move most Indians aren’t making.

This is independent commentary, not financial advice.

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