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Secured Cards — Compared

Building or rebuilding credit with a refundable cash deposit. This page compares secured cards against the other main card types on stable, objective attributes — not on rate numbers, which change and vary by issuer.

At a glance

Primary useBuilding or rebuilding credit with a refundable cash deposit
Best forPeople new to credit or rebuilding it who may not qualify for an unsecured card
Is it credit?Yes — a revolving credit line backed by a deposit
Builds credit?Yes, when the issuer reports to all three bureaus
Backed by a deposit?Yes — a refundable deposit, typically setting the limit
Annual feeVaries; compare carefully
RewardsUsually limited or none
Key tradeoffMore accessible and can build credit with responsible use, but ties up cash and usually carries a modest limit
What to watch forThat it reports to all three bureaus, the fees, and whether it can graduate to an unsecured card

Full guide: Secured Credit Cards — how they work, pros & cons, and FAQ →

How Secured compares to other card types

TypeBest forBuilds credit?Backed by a deposit?
Travel RewardsFrequent travelers who pay the balance in full each monthYes (issuers report to the bureaus)No
CashbackEveryday spending; people who pay in full each month and want simple rewardsYes (issuers report to the bureaus)No
No Annual FeeLong-term/starter cards and fee-averse cardholdersYes (issuers report to the bureaus)No
Balance TransferPeople with card debt who can realistically clear it before the intro period endsYes (issuers report to the bureaus)No
StudentStudents with little or no credit history building credit responsiblyYes (issuers report to the bureaus)No
BusinessBusiness owners, including sole proprietors, separating business from personal spendingAffects personal credit when the owner is personally liable; reporting varies by issuerNo (typically)
Prepaid (not a credit card)People who want to spend their own funds, budget, or avoid a credit lineNo — generally not reported to credit bureausFunded by money you load (not a refundable credit deposit)

Sources: CFPB — Credit Cards; Federal Reserve — Choosing a Credit Card. Credit-card information follows the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and the Federal Reserve; always confirm current rates, fees, and terms with the issuer before applying.

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