Debit Cards vs. Credit Cards
Debit and credit cards may look alike, but they work very differently — and understanding those differences helps people make smarter financial decisions.
What Is a Debit Card?
A debit card allows you to pay using the money you already have in your bank account.
- Direct from your account: Each purchase withdraws funds from your checking account immediately.
- No borrowing or interest: Since you’re spending your own money, you don’t owe interest.
- Helps you stay on budget: You can only spend what’s available (unless you opt into overdraft services, which may include fees).
- Credit score impact: Debit card use does not build or affect credit history.
What Is a Credit Card?
A credit card lets you borrow money from a card issuer and pay it back later.
- Borrow now, repay later: Purchases are charged to a line of credit up to a set limit.
- Interest may apply: If you don’t pay your balance in full each month, interest charges apply.
- Builds credit: Responsible use (on‑time payments, low balances) helps build credit history.
- Strong fraud protection: Credit cards often provide enhanced fraud dispute rights.
Key Differences at a Glance
- Where money comes from:
- Debit: directly from your bank account.
- Credit: borrowed from the card issuer.
- Spending limit:
- Debit: limited to account balance.
- Credit: limited to approved credit line.
- Fees:
- Debit: no interest; possible overdraft fees.
- Credit: interest charges and potential annual fees.
- Fraud protection:
- Credit cards generally provide stronger protections.
- Credit building:
- Credit cards help build credit; debit cards do not.
Which Should You Use?
- Use a debit card for everyday spending when you want to avoid debt and keep spending aligned with your budget.
- Use a credit card for online purchases, travel, or when you want to earn rewards and strengthen your credit — as long as you pay it off responsibly.