Credit Card Application Rules: Every Issuer Explained (2026)
Last Updated: March 2026
Summary: Every credit card issuer has hidden rules that determine whether you will be approved. Understanding these rules is the difference between getting every bonus you want and wasting hard credit inquiries. This guide covers every major issuer's application policies.
Chase: The 5/24 Rule
Rule: Chase will auto-deny your application if you have opened 5 or more personal credit cards (from any issuer) in the past 24 months.
The 5/24 rule is the most important rule in the credit card game. It applies to nearly all Chase cards, including the Sapphire Preferred, Sapphire Reserve, United Explorer, Southwest Priority, and all Chase Ink business cards.
What Counts Toward 5/24
- All personal credit cards from any issuer (Chase, Amex, Citi, Barclays, etc.)
- Authorized user accounts (though you can call reconsideration to have these removed)
- Business cards from Capital One (Capital One reports business cards to personal credit reports)
What Does NOT Count Toward 5/24
- Business cards from Chase, Amex, Citi, Barclays — They do not appear on personal credit reports
- Store cards — Most store-only cards (not co-branded Visa/MC) do not count
- Credit limit increases — These are not new accounts
- Upgrades/downgrades — Product changes do not count as new accounts
How to Check Your 5/24 Status
Pull your free credit report from AnnualCreditReport.com. Count the number of credit card accounts opened in the last 24 months. If you see 4 or fewer, you are under 5/24 and can apply for Chase cards. If you see 5 or more, wait until older accounts fall off the 24-month window.
Chase Sapphire 48-Month Rule
Separate from 5/24: you cannot earn a Sapphire bonus if you received a Sapphire bonus (Preferred or Reserve) in the last 48 months. You also cannot hold both the Sapphire Preferred and Sapphire Reserve simultaneously.
Chase 1/30 Rule
Chase generally limits you to one personal card application per 30 days. For business cards, the limit is typically one every 90 days.
American Express: Once Per Lifetime
Rule: You can only receive a sign-up bonus on each Amex card once per lifetime (with some exceptions).
Amex's once-per-lifetime rule means you need to be strategic. If you got the Amex Gold with a 40,000-point bonus five years ago, you typically cannot get a new Amex Gold and receive the current 60,000-point bonus.
Key Details
- Applies to sign-up bonuses only — You can still get the card, you just will not receive the welcome bonus
- Personal and business versions are separate — Getting the personal Amex Platinum does not disqualify you from the Business Platinum bonus
- Check before applying — Amex now shows a pop-up during the application process if you will not be eligible for the bonus
- Exceptions exist — Occasionally, Amex offers targeted "NLL" (No Lifetime Language) offers via email or the Amex app. These allow repeat bonuses. There is no reliable way to trigger these
Amex 2/90 Rule
You can only be approved for 2 Amex credit cards in any 90-day period. Charge cards (Platinum, Gold) do not count toward this limit and have no known cap.
Amex 5 Credit Card Limit
You can hold a maximum of 5 Amex credit cards at once. Charge cards (Platinum, Gold, Business Platinum, Business Gold) do not count toward this limit. If you are at the limit, close or downgrade an existing card before applying for a new one.
Citi: 1/8 and 2/65 Rules
Rules: One Citi application per 8 days, and no more than 2 Citi applications per 65 days.
Citi Application Rules
- 1/8 rule — Wait at least 8 days between Citi applications
- 2/65 rule — No more than 2 Citi applications in any 65-day window
- 48-month bonus rule — You cannot earn a bonus on the same Citi card if you received a bonus on that card or a card in the same product family in the last 48 months
- 24-month closure rule — You must wait 24 months after closing a Citi card before reapplying for the same card
Practical Impact
If you want the Citi AAdvantage Platinum and the Citi Strata Premier, apply for the first one, wait 9 days, then apply for the second. Do not apply for a third Citi card for at least 65 days after the first application.
Barclays: 6/24 Rule
Rule: Barclays is increasingly strict with applicants who have opened 6+ cards in 24 months.
Barclays issues the JetBlue Plus, AAdvantage Aviator, and Wyndham cards. While not as rigid as Chase's 5/24, Barclays tends to deny applicants with many recent new accounts. They also heavily weigh existing Barclays accounts and utilization.
- 6/24 is a soft rule — Unlike Chase, approval is possible above the threshold, especially with a strong relationship and high income
- Inquiry sensitive — Barclays is known to be sensitive to the number of recent hard inquiries on your credit report
- Reconsideration is possible — If denied, calling the reconsideration line often results in approval if you have a clean credit history
Capital One: 1/6 and 2/12 Rules
Rule: Capital One limits you to 1 new Capital One card every 6 months, and 2 per 12 months.
- Business cards count — Capital One business cards report to personal credit reports and count toward velocity limits
- Three-bureau pull — Capital One pulls from all three credit bureaus (Experian, TransUnion, Equifax) for one application, adding 3 hard inquiries
- 2 card limit — You can hold a maximum of 2 Capital One consumer credit cards at once (though the Venture X may be an exception)
Bank of America: 2/3/4 Rule
Rule: Bank of America limits you to 2 new cards per 2-month period, 3 per 12 months, and 4 per 24 months.
BofA issues the Alaska Airlines Visa Signature, the BofA Travel Rewards card, and the BofA Premium Rewards card. The 2/3/4 rule applies across all BofA cards.
- Relationship matters — Having BofA checking/savings accounts and Merrill Lynch investments significantly improves approval odds
- 24-month bonus rule — You must wait 24 months since your last bonus on the same card to qualify again
Application Timing Strategy
Knowing the rules is half the battle. Here is a timing framework that works for most applicants:
- Month 1: Apply for your first Chase card (Sapphire Preferred or Ink Preferred)
- Month 2-3: Meet the minimum spend requirement on your Chase card
- Month 4: Apply for an Amex card (Gold, Platinum, or Blue Business Plus) — does not count toward 5/24
- Month 5-6: Meet the Amex minimum spend
- Month 7: Apply for your second Chase card (different product)
- Month 8-9: Meet the Chase minimum spend
- Month 10: Apply for a Citi or Barclays card
- Repeat: Continue spacing applications 3 months apart, prioritizing Chase while under 5/24
Golden Rules of Application Timing
- Never apply for two cards on the same day (except for rare "modified double dip" strategies with Chase)
- Only apply when you can meet the minimum spend — Manufactured spending is risky and unnecessary for most people
- Check your credit score before applying — Most premium cards require 720+ FICO scores
- Do not apply before a mortgage or auto loan — New credit inquiries and accounts temporarily lower your credit score
- Always check the issuer's pre-qualification tool first — Amex, Chase, and Capital One all offer soft-pull pre-qualification checks
Recommended Application Order
For someone starting from scratch who wants to maximize bonuses over 24 months:
- Chase Sapphire Preferred — 60,000 UR ($900 value) — Start here, always
- Chase Ink Business Preferred — 100,000 UR ($1,500 value) — Does not count toward 5/24
- Amex Gold — 60,000 MR ($720 value) — Does not count toward Chase 5/24
- United Explorer or Southwest Priority — Pick your airline
- World of Hyatt — 60,000 Hyatt pts ($1,020 value) — Best hotel card
- Amex Platinum — 150,000 MR ($1,800 value) — Once you travel enough to use the perks
- Citi Strata Premier — 75,000 TY ($750 value) — After you pass 5/24
- Capital One Venture X — 75,000 miles ($750 value) — After Citi cooldown
Following this order maximizes Chase opportunities while under 5/24, then pivots to Amex (which has lifetime limits but no velocity restrictions with charge cards) and other issuers. Total estimated value: $8,000+ in sign-up bonuses over 24 months. See current offers on our sign-up bonus tracker.
What to Do If You Are Denied
- Wait for the denial letter — It will arrive in 7-10 days and explain the reason
- Call reconsideration — Most issuers have a dedicated reconsideration line where you can plead your case to a human analyst. Success rates are 30-60% depending on the reason for denial
- Offer to move credit — If the denial is due to "too much credit extended," offer to move credit from an existing card to the new one
- Wait and reapply — If reconsideration fails, wait 3-6 months, improve the issue cited in the denial, and try again
Related Guides
- Current Best Sign-Up Bonuses
- Best Travel Credit Cards 2026
- Best Business Travel Cards
- Best Airline Credit Cards
- Points vs. Miles Guide
Disclosure: Travel Card Guide earns a commission when you open a credit card through our links. This does not affect the price you pay. We only recommend cards we genuinely believe offer exceptional value. Application rules are based on publicly reported data points from the credit card community and may change without notice. Always verify eligibility directly with the card issuer before applying.