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HomeNewsBusinessPersonal FinanceCredit limit increases: When to accept, when to decline, and how they affect your score

Credit limit increases: When to accept, when to decline, and how they affect your score

A higher limit can lift your credit score—or lure you into costly debt; here’s how to decide wisely.

October 29, 2025 / 15:01 IST
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A higher credit limit raises your total available credit. If your spending stays the same, your credit-utilisation ratio (spend ÷ limit) falls—a key factor in most scoring models. Lower utilisation typically supports a better score, while high utilisation can drag it down even if you pay on time. Aim to keep overall and per-card utilisation below roughly 30 percent as a working guardrail.

When to accept an increase

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Say yes when a bigger limit helps you cut utilisation without changing your spending habits, or when your monthly expenses occasionally spike (travel, medical, business reimbursements) and you want to avoid max-outs. It’s also sensible after your income has risen, your repayment history is clean, and you’re planning major credit (home/auto) in the next 6-12 months—lower utilisation can smooth approvals and pricing.

When to decline (or keep it modest)