i just started looking at this so forgive any dumbassness. My son is about to graduate HS (hes 18) and instead of giving him cash for stuff he needs occasionally, I started looking into a card. I came across this auth user thing. Can someone explain this to me and if its good or bad? thanks!
Is an "authorized user" credit card a good way to help young adult with no history build credit?
byu/Dadhole69 inpersonalfinance
Posted by Dadhole69
12 Comments
Yeah it’s actually pretty solid for building credit history. Just make sure you’re responsible with the card since any missed payments or high balances will hit his credit too. My parents did this for me and it gave me a decent head start when I went to get my own card later
Yeah, my kids had 740+ scores when they graduated high school since they were authorized users on my travel card that I used and paid off every month. They’ll take a good hit when you remove them eventually, but it’ll rebound if they’re responsible credit users anyway.
AU is often overblown and doesn’t really build credit, as the primary account holder is responsible for the payments. Furthermore, most lenders will often ignore the AU aspect and just focus on the personal credit side.
Since he’s 18, have him sign up for his own cards to start building his own credit history.
https://www.reddit.com/r/CRedit/s/OpKGXEugQh
Assuming your credit history on that card is good, it’s a good way to jumpstart credit, as your son gets all the history (including before you added him) associated with that card.
You don’t even have to physically give him the card either, it doesn’t matter if he uses it. It’s about the overall account, not his card or usage.
I did this for both my kids, they started with credit scores around 750. They’ll still have a very thin file of course, but that’s generally enough to help them get “adult” credit in their own name without having to mess around with secured or very low limit cards.
TLDR, good plan, as long as your own credit is good.
This wild to me.
In my country a credit card is actually bad for your overall credit score when it comes to applying for loans.
It is actually advised to close down any credit accou t a few months before applying for a loan.
Yes, but any debt on the CC also falls onto their score, so keep 40% free. Also, when they, or you, buy a car, cosign with them.
Pay to get them a secured card in their name only. This keeps you free from their bad decisions and allows them to build credit on a card with a small, manageable limit.
Yes, it adds that entry to their credit report( for better or worse)
Yes and you don’t even have to give him the card. My son had one of ours in college and used it responsibly only for groceries and gas and it worked out great. I would not have done this for my other son. 😆
It is a good vehicle to help them build a credit history / score, but it will not do it on its own. Plus, you have to trust your children not to abuse the trust you have put into them.
Adding someone as an authorized user is a good shortcut to building credit, it doesn’t build credit on its own. So your son still needs his own credit card or loan to build his own credit.
Adding an AU imports your card’s credit history onto their report. Removing an AU removes the entire credit history from their report. Lenders often will ignore AU accounts as well. This is why it’s a mistake to say that AUs ‘builds’ credit, it doesn’t, its a shortcut to bump up one’s score and get better cards that then allows one to build up their credit.
I got my kids credit cards (safely locked in my documents drawer) when the younger was probably around 8. Surprisingly, some major credit card issuers don’t really have lower age limit.