A Shifting Centre of Gravity
For decades, the story of credit cards in India was a metropolitan one, centred around salaried professionals in cities like Mumbai, Delhi, and Bengaluru. That narrative is rapidly changing. According to a recent TransUnion CIBIL report, as of March 2026,
half of all first-time credit card users were aged 30 or below. Crucially, nearly 46% of these new customers came from semi-urban and rural markets, an increase from 42% just four years prior. This confirms a significant demographic and geographic expansion. The total number of cardholders in India has surged from 1.4 crore in 2016 to 5.2 crore in 2026, with outstanding balances growing more than eightfold to ₹3.1 lakh crore. This growth is no longer just about the metros; the next wave is clearly rising from India's heartland.
The Digital Foundation for Credit
This expansion didn't happen in a vacuum. It’s built on the rails of India's digital payments revolution. The widespread adoption of Unified Payments Interface (UPI) has been a crucial stepping stone, creating a generation of digitally savvy consumers, even in the smallest towns. With QR codes and one-tap payments becoming second nature, the conceptual leap to a credit card is smaller than ever. The integration of RuPay credit cards with UPI has been a massive catalyst, allowing users in Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities to make small, everyday purchases on credit. Data from SBI Card shows that around 77% of its UPI-active credit card customers are from these smaller cities, demonstrating how digital infrastructure is enabling deeper credit penetration.
New Players, New Rules
Traditional banks, with their stringent eligibility criteria, often overlooked customers in non-metro areas. This created a gap that new-age fintech companies have eagerly filled. Startups are redesigning the credit experience with mobile-first onboarding, no annual fees, and features tailored for a younger audience that values flexibility and control. They are leveraging data to offer credit to individuals without a traditional credit history. A notable trend is that a credit card is no longer the first formal credit product for many young people. A 2026 TransUnion CIBIL report found that 25% of new cardholders already had three or more credit products, like consumer durable loans or small-ticket personal loans. This suggests Gen Z is building a credit footprint through other means before getting their first card.
Aspirations Meet Affordability
The drivers of this trend are as much cultural as they are technological. Gen Z in smaller towns holds similar aspirations to their metro counterparts, fuelled by social media and e-commerce platforms that now deliver to nearly every postal code in the country. A credit card provides the means to access products and experiences, from the latest smartphones to online courses. Financial institutions have recognised this, with a Visa study highlighting that non-metro consumers value affordability, aspiration, and convenience. Lenders are responding with products that offer flexible repayment options and lifestyle-related rewards. This generation is also embracing Equated Monthly Instalments (EMIs), a trend that has moved beyond big cities, making high-value purchases more accessible.
A Question of Financial Health
While this expansion signals greater financial inclusion, it also raises important questions about debt and financial literacy. Gen Z borrowers tend to accumulate debt faster than previous generations. Around 28% of new Gen Z cardholders had balances over ₹25,000 within just three months of getting their card, compared to 20% for millennials. Furthermore, 69% of Gen Z card users took on another credit product within a year. This rapid embrace of credit underscores the need for robust financial education. While some young borrowers show caution by opting for secured cards backed by fixed deposits, the potential for falling into a debt trap is real. As lenders push deeper into these new markets, ensuring growth is responsible and aligned with borrowers' repayment capacity is a critical challenge for the entire ecosystem.
















