Why "no credit" costs real money
Your credit file is a record of loans and cards and whether you paid them on time. Lenders price you by it. With no file, you're a mystery, and lenders charge mysteries more — a first car loan without credit history can cost thousands more in interest than the same loan a year of credit-building later. That's the whole reason to start before you need anything.
Building a file from zero: the three starter tools
Do one or two of these for six to twelve months and you stop being a mystery.
Your first credit card: the three rules
- Pay the full statement balance, every month. Carrying a balance doesn't build credit any faster — that's a myth — it just pays the bank interest. On-time payments build credit; interest builds nothing.
- Keep usage low. The share of your limit you're using (called utilization) matters; staying well under a third of the limit is the common rule of thumb. A $500 limit with $450 on it reads as stress, even if you pay it.
- Never miss the date. One payment 30 days late can undo a year of building. Set autopay for at least the minimum on day one, then pay the rest manually.
- Everything else about cards — 0% offers, cash advances, the minimum-payment trap — is in the credit-card guide.
Your first car loan
The full playbook is in buying a car (and there's a printable checklist ↗ to take to the dealership). The first-timer extras:
- Join a credit union before you shop. They're consistently the friendliest lenders to thin credit files, and several are open to anyone. Get their quote first; make the dealer beat it.
- A bigger down payment beats a longer loan. Stretching to 72 or 84 months makes the payment look friendly and the total cost ugly — and leaves you owing more than the car is worth for years.
- The dealer's finance office is a store. Everything in it is optional. First-time buyers are their favorite customers; the scripts in the playbook exist for exactly that room.
- Buy less car than you can afford. The insurance, at your age, will make sure of it anyway — get an insurance quote on the exact model before you commit.
Cosigning: read this from both sides
A cosigner isn't a character reference — they're a co-owner of the debt. If you miss payments, the lender goes after them; the loan sits on their credit file the whole time (which can affect their own borrowing); and late payments hurt both of you. If a parent cosigns your loan:
- Agree in writing, between yourselves, who pays what and what happens if you can't.
- Set up account access so the cosigner can see the loan — surprises are how families fall out.
- Ask up front whether the lender offers cosigner release after a run of on-time payments — some do; the CFPB (Consumer Financial Protection Bureau) has found releases are far from automatic, so treat it as a maybe, not a plan.
And the flip side: when you're eventually asked to cosign for a friend or sibling — this same math applies to you.
The traps built for your age group
The products marketed hardest to 18-to-25-year-olds are the ones that quietly drain them: Buy Now, Pay Later plans that stack four purchases deep, cash-advance apps with "tips" that work out to payday-loan prices, and anything that says "no credit check" (translation: "we don't need to check — the price assumes you're desperate"). We put the receipts — regulators' own numbers — in one place: cash advance apps & BNPL and the expensive last resorts.
When to actually borrow
A loan is a tool for things that outlast the payments: education that raises your income (student loans guide), the car that gets you to work, eventually a home (first-time buyer programs). If the thing will be gone before the debt is — dinners, trips, clothes, upgrades — save for it instead. That one habit, boring as it sounds, is most of what separates people who have money at 30 from people who have payments at 30.