Credit Card Application Rejected in India? Here's What to Do
Updated 17 March 2026
Bottom Line: A rejected credit card application is fixable, not fatal. Figure out the exact reason (ask the bank — they’re required to tell you), fix that specific issue, wait at least 90 days, and reapply strategically. Applying blindly to multiple banks after a rejection is the single worst thing you can do.
Why Did Your Application Get Rejected?
Banks don’t reject applications randomly. Every rejection maps to one or more specific reasons in their underwriting system. Here are the real ones — not the vague “you didn’t meet our criteria” nonsense they put in rejection emails.
1. CIBIL Score Below 700
This is the #1 killer. Most major banks — HDFC, ICICI, SBI Card, Axis — want a CIBIL score of 720+ for their mid-tier and premium cards. Some entry-level cards accept 700, but below that, you’re fighting uphill.
2. Too Many Recent Hard Inquiries
Every time you apply for a credit card or loan, the bank pulls your CIBIL report. That’s a “hard inquiry.” Three or more inquiries in the last 6 months is a red flag. If you rage-applied to five banks after your first rejection, you’ve just made everything worse.
3. Income Doesn’t Match the Card
Applied for an Infinia or a Diners Club Black with a Rs 5 lakh annual salary? That’s an automatic rejection. Premium cards have minimum income thresholds — often Rs 10-15 lakh per annum for the good stuff, Rs 24 lakh+ for the top tier.
4. High Credit Utilisation
If you’re already using 70-80% of your existing credit limit every month, banks see you as risky. Keep utilisation below 30% — ideally below 15% — in the months before you apply.
5. Short or No Credit History
New to credit? Banks can’t assess what they can’t see. A “thin file” (less than 1-2 years of credit history) gets rejected more often than a file with a few minor blemishes.
6. Unstable Employment or Address
Frequent job changes (less than 1 year at current employer) or mismatched addresses across documents trigger manual review — which usually means rejection at volume-processing banks.
The 90-Day Playbook: What to Do After Rejection
Don’t just sit and hope. Here’s the exact sequence:
Step 1: Get Your CIBIL Report (Free)
Go to cibil.com and pull your free annual report. Check for errors — wrong accounts, incorrect outstanding amounts, duplicate entries. Dispute anything that’s wrong. RBI mandates that credit bureaus resolve disputes within 30 days.
Step 2: Ask the Bank for the Specific Reason
Under RBI’s Fair Practices Code, the bank must tell you why they rejected your application. Call the customer care number on the rejection email and ask explicitly. “Didn’t meet criteria” isn’t good enough — push for the specific parameter.
Step 3: Fix the Root Cause
| Rejection Reason | What to Fix | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| CIBIL below 700 | Pay all dues on time, reduce outstanding balances | 3-6 months |
| Too many inquiries | Stop applying, let inquiries age off | 6-12 months |
| Income too low | Apply for a card that matches your salary bracket | Immediate |
| High utilisation | Pay down existing card balances below 30% | 1-2 billing cycles |
| No credit history | Get a secured card or become an add-on card holder | 6-12 months |
| Employment instability | Wait until you’ve been at your current job 1+ year | Time-dependent |
Step 4: Wait at Least 90 Days Before Reapplying
This isn’t optional. Each application generates a hard inquiry. Spacing applications at least 90 days apart — ideally 6 months — gives your score time to recover and shows banks you’re not desperate.
Step 5: Apply Strategically
Don’t reapply to the same bank for the same card. Instead, target a card where you actually meet the criteria. If you have a salary account with a bank, start there — salary account holders get significantly higher approval rates.
The Backdoor: Cards That Are Easier to Get
If you’ve been rejected for a premium card, don’t keep banging on that door. These paths have the highest approval rates in India:
Secured Credit Cards
You deposit Rs 10,000-25,000 as collateral, and the bank gives you a card with that as your limit. After 12-18 months of responsible use, most banks upgrade you to an unsecured card and return your deposit. Best options: ICICI Instant Platinum, Axis Insta Easy, SBI Unnati.
FD-Backed Cards
Similar concept — your Fixed Deposit becomes collateral. IDFC First Bank, Kotak, and SBI all offer FD-backed cards. The advantage: your FD keeps earning interest while you build credit history.
Salary Account Cards
HDFC, ICICI, and Axis pre-approve cards for salary account holders with far lower score thresholds. Check your net banking portal — there might be a pre-approved offer sitting there right now that doesn’t require a fresh CIBIL pull.
Entry-Level Lifetime Free Cards
These have the lowest rejection rates because banks use them as customer acquisition tools:
| Card | Annual Fee | Min Income | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon Pay ICICI | Lifetime free | Rs 3 lakh | Amazon shoppers |
| Flipkart Axis Bank | Lifetime free | Rs 3 lakh | Flipkart + general spend |
| IDFC First Classic | Lifetime free | Rs 2.5 lakh | Building credit history |
| SBI SimplyCLICK | Rs 499 (waived at Rs 1L spend) | Rs 3 lakh | Online shopping |
| AU Small Finance LIT | Lifetime free | Rs 2 lakh | Customisable rewards |
What NOT to Do After a Rejection
- Don’t apply to 5 banks in a week. Each application is a hard inquiry. You’re digging yourself deeper.
- Don’t fall for “guaranteed approval” agents. No legitimate channel can guarantee approval. These are either scams or they’re applying with falsified documents — which is fraud.
- Don’t close old credit accounts. Length of credit history matters. That old card you never use is actually helping your score.
- Don’t ignore the rejection. It’s data. Use it.
Related Guides on CardTrail
- Travel Credit Cards: The India-Specific Guide — once you’re approved, pick the right card for your next trip
- Compare Cards Side by Side — find the card that actually matches your profile
- RBI Rules Every Cardholder Should Know — your rights as a credit card holder in India
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a credit card rejection affect my CIBIL score?
The rejection itself doesn’t. But the hard inquiry from the application does — it can drop your score by 5-15 points. Multiple applications in a short period compound this effect.
How long should I wait before reapplying after rejection?
Minimum 90 days, ideally 6 months. Use that time to fix whatever caused the rejection. Reapplying immediately to a different bank with the same underlying issue will just get you rejected again.
Can I get a credit card with a CIBIL score below 650?
Yes, but your options are limited to secured cards and FD-backed cards. ICICI Instant Platinum and IDFC First WOW are the most accessible. Build 12 months of clean history and your unsecured card options open up dramatically.
Should I apply for multiple cards at once to improve my chances?
Absolutely not. This is the most common mistake. Each application is a separate hard inquiry. Apply to one card where you genuinely meet the eligibility criteria, wait for the result, and only then consider your next move.
Is there a way to check if I’ll be approved before applying?
Some banks offer “pre-approved” or “pre-qualified” checks through net banking or their apps — HDFC, ICICI, and Axis all do this. These are soft pulls that don’t affect your CIBIL score. Always check for pre-approved offers before submitting a fresh application.
My CIBIL score is good but I still got rejected. Why?
A good score (750+) isn’t a guarantee. Banks also check income stability, existing debt-to-income ratio, number of recent inquiries, and internal risk models you can’t see. If you have a salary account with the rejecting bank, call and ask — they have more detailed notes than what the rejection email says.
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