Credit Score

Authorized User Strategy: Build Credit Using Someone Else's Card

Learn how becoming an authorized user on someone else's credit card can help build your credit, the risks involved, and how to use this strategy effectively.

F
FixMyCredit99 Team
(Updated August 20, 2024)
10 min read

Key Takeaways

  • Authorized user status can add years of credit history
  • You benefit from the account's age and payment history
  • You don't need the physical card or to make purchases
  • Both positive and negative history can transfer
  • Easy to remove yourself if needed

How Authorized User Status Works

When you're added as an authorized user on someone else's credit card, that entire account history typically appears on your credit report. You benefit from their payment history, credit limit, and account age.

What Gets Reported

  • Account age: The full age of the account, even if opened before you were added
  • Payment history: The entire payment record transfers
  • Credit limit: Added to your available credit
  • Utilization: The account's balance-to-limit ratio

Authorized User Basics

  • Impact timeline: 1-2 billing cycles
  • Cost: Usually free
  • Your liability: None (for the debt)
  • Removal: Easy, by phone request

Not All Cards Report AU Status

Some credit card issuers don't report authorized user accounts to credit bureaus. Before being added, confirm with the issuer that they report authorized users. Major issuers typically do.

Benefits and Risks

Pros

  • Instant credit history boost
  • Inherit years of positive history
  • No credit check to be added
  • No financial liability for debt
  • Easy to remove yourself

Cons

  • Negative history transfers too
  • Dependent on primary holder's behavior
  • May not help with manual reviews
  • Doesn't teach credit management
  • Some scoring models discount AU accounts

The Benefits

  • Immediate history: A 10-year-old account adds 10 years to your credit history average
  • Improved utilization: Their limit adds to your total available credit
  • Payment history: Years of on-time payments benefit your score
  • No risk: You're not legally responsible for the debt

The Risks

  • Bad history transfers: Late payments, high utilization hurt your score too
  • Relationship risk: Mixing credit and relationships can cause problems
  • Primary holder's behavior: You're dependent on them maintaining the account well
  • Artificial credit: Some lenders look for actual account ownership

Choose the Right Account

Only become an authorized user on an account that's old, has perfect payment history, and low utilization. A poorly managed account hurts you just as much as it would hurt the primary holder.

Best Practices for Authorized Users

Before Being Added

  • Confirm the issuer reports authorized users to bureaus
  • Check the account's age, payment history, and utilization
  • Discuss expectations with the primary cardholder
  • Agree whether you'll have the physical card

Ideal Account Characteristics

  • Age: Older is better—look for 5+ years
  • Payment history: Perfect—no late payments ever
  • Utilization: Under 30%, ideally under 10%
  • Credit limit: Higher limits help utilization

After Being Added

  • Monitor your credit report to confirm it appears
  • Watch the account's utilization and payment status
  • Be ready to request removal if account quality declines
  • Use this time to build your own credit too

For Primary Cardholders Adding Someone

What You're Agreeing To

  • Your liability: You're 100% responsible for any charges they make
  • Their access: They can make purchases on your account
  • Your credit: Their spending affects your utilization

Protecting Yourself

  • Don't give them the physical card if you don't want them spending
  • Set a low spending limit if the issuer allows
  • Monitor the account regularly
  • Know you can remove them at any time

Primary Holder Considerations

  • Your liability: 100% for their charges
  • Their credit impact: None to your score
  • Removal ability: Any time by phone
  • Card access: You control this

A Gift of Credit History

Adding a family member as an authorized user can give them a significant head start on building credit—especially young adults or those recovering from credit problems. Just ensure your account is in excellent shape.

Monitor Your Credit as You Build

Whether building through authorized user status or your own accounts, check your credit report for errors that could undermine your progress.

Frequently Asked Questions

Impact varies widely. For thin-file users, adding a well-aged card with low utilization can boost scores 30-50+ points. The effect is smaller if you already have established credit.
No. The credit-building benefit comes from the account appearing on your report, not from using the card. You don't need to make purchases or even have the card in hand.
Yes. You can request removal at any time by contacting the card issuer. When removed, the account typically falls off your credit report entirely.
Mortgage underwriters often look more closely at credit. They may discount authorized user accounts or require you to show credit in your own name. It helps your score but may face scrutiny.
While companies sell this service ('tradelines'), it's controversial and may be considered fraud by lenders. The authentic approach—a family member adding you—is legitimate and effective.

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