The best credit card for you depends entirely on how you use it — your spending pattern, repayment behaviour, and financial goals. A card that earns a friend £500/year in cashback could cost you hundreds in interest if your repayment habits are different. This hub cuts through category marketing to match card types to real usage patterns.
Use this as the central index for PocketWise’s credit card comparison cluster. For fundamental mechanics before you choose, start with the Credit Card Basics hub.
Best Credit Card Types at a Glance — 2026
| Card category | Best for | Typical benefit | Watch out for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cashback | Full monthly payers | 0.5%–1.5% back on spending | Wiped out by carrying any balance |
| Travel / no-FX-fee | Regular overseas use | No 2.5–3% foreign transaction fee | Acceptance limits on Amex |
| 0% purchase | Planned large spend | 12–24 months of free financing | Revert rate 24–35% after promo |
| Balance transfer | Existing card debt | 0% on transferred balance (up to 36 months) | Transfer fee 1–3% |
| Credit builder | Poor or thin credit file | Rebuilds credit history | APR 30–70% — never carry balance |
| Student card | Student income pattern | Low limits, low barrier | Low limits slow credit file building |
| Rewards / points | High spend, active redeemer | Air miles, hotel nights, vouchers | Points can expire or devalue |
| Business card | Business expenses | Spending tracking, cashback, expense tools | Not Section 75 protected |
How to Choose a Credit Card — 5-Step Framework
| Step | Key question | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Define purpose | Is this for rewards, travel, credit building, or 0% financing? | Prevents category mismatch |
| 2. Confirm repayment intent | Will you clear the balance in full each month? | Interest at 24–35% APR erases most rewards |
| 3. Check eligibility | Use soft-search tools before applying | Avoids hard searches that stay on your credit file for 12 months |
| 4. Compare true cost | Annual fee, APR, and all charges vs actual benefit | Avoids expensive premium card traps |
| 5. Set up autopay | Direct debit for full balance or minimum payment | Prevents late payment fees and credit file damage |
Worked Example — Cashback Card vs Premium Rewards Card
Scenario: Jamie spends £1,200/month on the card and always pays in full.
| Card | Annual fee | Effective cashback/rewards rate | Annual benefit | Net annual gain |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free cashback card (1%) | £0 | £144 cashback | £144 | £144 |
| Premium rewards card | £200 | £360 in points (3% on spend) | £360 | £160 |
The premium card wins here — but only if Jamie values the points at full face value and actually redeems them well. If the points earn 1p each instead of 3p, the premium card delivers only £144 in value and the fee makes it worse. For most people without a clear redemption strategy, the free cashback card is safer.
Cashback Cards — Practical Guide
Cashback cards pay a percentage of your spending back into your account. Key considerations:
- Most strong cashback cards require full monthly repayment to make sense
- Some offer tiered rates: 1.5% on fuel, 1% on supermarkets, 0.5% on everything else
- Watch for expiry periods on cashback credits (some cards cap accumulation or require claiming)
- American Express cashback cards have high earn rates but are not accepted everywhere
Rule of thumb: a 1% cashback card covering £1,000/month of spending earns £120/year. If you carry a balance of £500 at 24.9% APR for even one month, you pay £10 in interest — erasing over a month of cashback accumulation.
0% Purchase Cards — How the Maths Works
A 0% purchase card offering 18 months interest-free on a £3,600 purchase creates a structured repayment plan:
- Monthly payment needed to clear before promo ends: £200/month
- Interest paid at 0%: £0
- Same purchase on a standard 24.9% APR card paying £100/month: interest paid = approximately £480
The savings are real — but only with a disciplined repayment plan in place from day one.
Balance Transfer Cards — When to Use Them
A balance transfer card moves existing card debt to a new card offering 0% interest for a promotional period — typically 12–36 months. Most charge a transfer fee of 1–3% of the balance moved.
Worthwhile if:
- your existing card charges 20%+ APR on a persistent balance
- you can clear the full transferred balance within the promotional period
- you do not make new purchases on the transfer card (usually charged at the full purchase rate)
Credit Builder Cards — What to Expect
Credit builder cards have high APRs (30–70%) because they accept applicants who are higher-risk. The strategy is to never pay interest:
| Spending target | Credit limit | Monthly spend (under 30%) | Monthly payment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Credit building | £500 | £150 | £150 in full |
| Credit building | £1,000 | £300 | £300 in full |
After 12–18 months of clean payment history, most people become eligible for mainstream cards with standard APRs of 20–25%.
Approval and Eligibility — Protecting Your Credit File
Every full credit card application creates a hard search on your credit file, visible to lenders for 12 months. Multiple hard searches in a short period can reduce your chances of approval.
- Use eligibility checkers (soft search) before applying
- Space applications at least 3–6 months apart if you need multiple products
- High utilisation on existing cards (over 50% of limit used) can reduce approval chances
- Electoral roll registration significantly helps verification
Related Hubs
- Credit Card Basics hub — mechanics, APR, Section 75, repayment
- Credit Debt hub — credit scores and how to improve them
- Loans and Borrowing hub — alternatives to credit card borrowing