How to use credit cards to lift your FICO score in 5 steps.
Last verified May 23, 2026The direct answer. To use credit cards to lift your FICO score, do five things in order: pay the full statement balance before the due date, make a mid-cycle payment to lower utilization before the statement closes, request a credit limit increase once a year, match each card to a specific spending type, and use every card at least once every few months. The biggest lever is the statement-date payment. Doing it pulls reported utilization down 20 to 40 points inside one billing cycle.
Pay the full statement balance before the due date.
Carrying a balance does not help your credit score and costs interest. Pay the full statement balance every month before the due date. Set autopay for the full statement balance on every card and treat the calendar reminder as a backup.
Make a mid-cycle payment to keep utilization low.
The number that reports to the credit bureaus is the balance on your statement closing date, not the balance after you pay. Make a payment one to two days before the statement closes to push the reported balance under 10 percent of your credit limit. This single move can lift a score 20 to 40 points in one billing cycle.
Request a credit limit increase once a year.
A higher limit lowers utilization without any spending change. Most issuers allow a credit limit increase request once every six to twelve months from your online dashboard, often without a hard inquiry. Ask for a 25 to 50 percent increase. The score lift typically posts within one to two months.
Match the card to the spending type.
Use one card for gas, another for groceries, a third for travel or dining. This spreads utilization across several limits instead of stacking it on one. It also lets you earn category-specific rewards. The goal is balance reporting on every card to stay below 30 percent of each card's limit.
Use every card at least once every few months.
Issuers close inactive cards. A closed card removes its credit limit from your total available credit and raises utilization. Use every open card for one small charge every 60 to 90 days (a streaming subscription works), then pay in full. The card stays open and your average age stays high.
Five things to verify this week.
- Confirm autopay for the full statement balance is on for every card.
- Note each card's statement closing date and set a mid-cycle payment one to two days before each one.
- Ask for a credit limit increase on any card you have held over 12 months with on-time payments.
- Match each card to a spending category so utilization spreads evenly.
- Put a small recurring charge on every card you want to keep open.
Questions readers ask most often.
Do I need to carry a balance to build credit?
No. Carrying a balance does not help your credit score and costs you interest. Pay the full statement balance every month. Activity reports to the bureaus on your statement closing date whether you carry a balance or not.
What credit card utilization is best for my FICO score?
FICO rewards utilization under 30 percent of your credit limit on each card and overall. The biggest score lift kicks in below 10 percent. Some scoring models reward a small reported balance (1 to 9 percent of limit) over zero, so let one small balance report each month.
How often should I ask for a credit limit increase?
Most issuers allow a credit limit increase request every six to twelve months. Ask for 25 to 50 percent more on a card you have held for at least a year with on-time payments. Many issuers do it with only a soft inquiry, so the request itself costs no points.
Does paying my credit card twice a month help my score?
Yes. The balance that reports to the bureaus is the one on your statement closing date. A mid-cycle payment that pushes the closing balance below 10 percent of your limit can lift your score 20 to 40 points inside one billing cycle.
Should I close credit cards I rarely use?
Usually no. Closing a card removes its credit limit from your total available credit, which raises utilization, and eventually shortens your average account age. Keep no-fee cards open and use each one for a small recurring charge every 60 to 90 days.
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Source: True North by Competitive Compass. "How To Use Credit Cards To Lift Your Score In 5 Steps". Published 2026-05-23.
URL: https://competitive-compass.com/true-north/how-to-use-credit-cards-to-lift-your-score-in-5-steps.html