Match the loan to the purpose
A product meant for a car, home, or education is often cheaper than a general personal loan.
A simple guide to credit in India
Built for first-time borrowers in India
Ask questions, clear confusion, and get guidance that feels local, simple, and safe.
Credit Help
Get clear answers, safer next steps, and pages to read next.
Tip: ask about your goal, such as buying a car, building a score, or checking whether an EMI is safe.
Built on RBI rules and how India's credit bureaus (CIBIL, Experian, CRIF, Equifax) actually work. We are not a lender and never sell your data.
Your step-by-step plan
A simple, safe 4-step path for first-time borrowers in India — what to do, and why, in order.
Start the 4-step planAlready have a score? Check it free or improve a low score
What do you want to do?
See which starter product fits — secured cards, UPI credit lines, or a small loan.
See optionsEstimate an EMI with fees and see if it fits your monthly budget.
Open EMI checkSpot predatory apps, verify a lender, and know the helplines.
See safety guideNot sure what these words mean yet? Start with what credit and a credit score even are, in plain language.
Learn the basics firstKeep it safe
A product meant for a car, home, or education is often cheaper than a general personal loan.
Fast approval can still be expensive if the rate, tenure, or charges do not fit your life.
If you are unsure, ask the helper above what loan type usually matches your goal before applying anywhere.
Common questions
Yes. A small, manageable credit product handled well over time is often a safer first step. A secured credit card backed by an FD is a common starter.
Not always. The safer option depends on whether you can understand and repay it comfortably every month.
Be extra careful with EMIs. Use conservative estimates and choose products that still feel manageable during a slower month.
Visit sachet.rbi.org.in and search the lender's name. Real digital lenders work through RBI-regulated entities and disclose them inside the app.
Scores run 300 to 900. Roughly: 750+ is excellent, 650–749 good, 550–649 fair, below 550 poor. Aim for 700+ in your first year and 750+ over time.
A score usually appears after about 6 months of reported activity, and a healthy profile takes 6 to 12 months of paying every due on time.
No. Checking your own score is a soft enquiry and has no impact. You can check as often as you like.
You get one free full report a year from each bureau (CIBIL, Experian, Equifax, CRIF High Mark) on their official sites, and many banking apps show a free score too.
Yes. Being new is not the same as bad. A secured / FD-backed card is the easiest start, and per RBI/government guidance lenders may also consider salary slips, bank statements, or a co-applicant.
It is often a thin or empty file, not a 'bad' one. Check your report for errors, start with a secured product, and avoid reapplying again and again — each application is a hard enquiry.
Yes. BNPL is credit. Missed payments can be reported to bureaus and hurt your score, so use only what you can clear in full.
A co-applicant applies with you; a guarantor backs your loan if you cannot pay. It is usually a parent, spouse, or close family with steady income, and either can help a first-timer get approved. But they are legally responsible for the dues if you miss them, and a missed payment can hurt their credit score too — so only ask someone who understands and accepts that.
Choose what fits you so we can show simpler examples and safer next steps on this visit.
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Use this form if something was unclear, missing, or especially useful. Please do not enter PAN, Aadhaar, bank, or card details.
Credit Help
Get clear answers, safer next steps, and pages to read next.
Tip: ask about your goal, such as buying a car, building a score, or checking whether an EMI is safe.