- NA (not available) or -1: no credit account has ever been reported in your name.
- NH (no history): there is a trace of an account, but not enough recent activity to score you — often less than six months of history.
- Neither is negative. A defaulted loan gives you a low score; no loan gives you no score. Lenders can tell the difference instantly.
Guides
CIBIL score -1, NA or NH: what it means and what to do next
If you checked your CIBIL report and saw -1, NA, or NH instead of a number, take a breath: this is not a bad score. It is not a score at all.
NA / NH means "no history" — the bureau has never seen a loan or credit card in your name, or has seen less than about six months of activity. Millions of Indians start exactly here.
5 min read · Updated: 9 July 2026
What -1, NA and NH actually mean
What lenders see when you apply
Many mainstream unsecured products — regular credit cards, personal loans — are automatically declined for applicants with no score, because the lender has nothing to assess. That rejection is not personal; the file is simply empty.
This is why the right first product matters. Products backed by your own deposit, like a secured credit card against a fixed deposit, approve happily with no score at all — your FD covers the lender's risk.
From NH to a real score
You need one active account that reports to the bureaus, used well. A secured card is the safest way to open one. After roughly six months of on-time payments, the bureaus have enough history to generate a score — and because the history is clean, that first score is usually healthy.
- Open one starter product (a secured / FD-backed card is the standard choice).
- Pay 100% of every bill before the due date — set up autopay for the full amount.
- Keep spending under about 30% of your limit.
- Do not apply for anything else for a few months; each application is a hard enquiry on a file that has almost nothing in it.
- Recheck your free bureau report after 3-6 months and watch the score appear.
The one mistake to avoid
Do not respond to a rejection by applying to five other lenders the same week. Every application adds a hard enquiry, and a burst of enquiries on an empty file makes the next lender warier, not keener. One product, used well, is the whole strategy.
Quick questions
How long until I get a score?
Typically about six months after your first reporting account opens. Bureaus receive lender data roughly fortnightly, so the score also updates within weeks of each bill you pay, not instantly.
Is a -1 score bad for jobs or visas?
No. It simply says you have not used credit yet. It carries no negative mark of any kind.
Will checking my own report create a score?
No. Checking is a soft enquiry and creates nothing. Only a reported credit account builds history.
Can I get any loan with no score?
Secured options work: a loan against your own FD, a secured credit card, or gold-backed loans from banks. Some lenders also assess new-to-credit applicants on income and banking history — but compare terms carefully and check the lender on our safety page first.
Where to go next
Build your score from scratchSecured credit card against FDCheck your score for free
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