How Credit Cards Work UK 2026 — Beginner's Complete Guide

Credit Card vs Debit Card UK — What's the Difference?

The key differences between credit cards and debit cards. When to use each, purchase protection, fraud protection, and which is right for you.

Credit card information is for educational purposes only. Credit products are regulated by the FCA. Always check terms and eligibility before applying. If you're struggling with credit card debt, free help is available from StepChange.

If you are learning how cards work and want a complete route through applications, costs, and repayment strategy, use the Credit Card Basics Hub as your main guide.

Credit cards and debit cards look similar but work very differently. Understanding when to use each can save you money and protect your purchases.

Key Differences

FeatureCredit CardDebit Card
Whose moneyBank’s (borrowed)Yours
When you payLater (statement)Immediately
Interest charged?Yes, if not paid in fullNo
Credit limitYesLimited by your balance
Builds creditYesUsually no
Section 75 protectionYes (£100-£30,000)No
ChargebackYesYes (but weaker)

How Each Works

Debit Card

AspectHow It Works
SpendingMoney leaves your account immediately (or within hours)
OverdraftMay go overdrawn if you spend more than you have
InterestNo interest (but overdraft fees if applicable)
Account typeLinked to current account

Credit Card

AspectHow It Works
SpendingBorrowed from card issuer up to credit limit
StatementMonthly bill shows what you owe
PaymentPay by due date; full balance = no interest
InterestCharged if you don’t pay in full (~20-30% APR)

Purchase Protection Comparison

Section 75 (Credit Cards Only)

FeatureDetail
What it coversPurchases £100–£30,000
Who’s liableCard issuer equally liable with seller
What’s protectedFaulty goods, non-delivery, company goes bust
CostFree — it’s the law
ExampleBook £2,000 holiday, company fails = claim full amount from card issuer

Chargeback (Both Cards)

FeatureDebit CardCredit Card
AvailableYesYes
Legal right?No — card scheme rulesNo — card scheme rules
Time limitUsually 120 daysUsually 120 days
What’s coveredNon-delivery, faulty goodsNon-delivery, faulty goods
StrengthWeakerStronger (plus Section 75 backup)

Key point: For purchases £100+, credit cards give you both Section 75 AND chargeback. Debit cards only give chargeback.

When to Use Each

Use a Credit Card For

SituationWhy
Online shoppingBetter fraud protection, Section 75
Purchases over £100Section 75 protection
Travel bookingsProtection if company fails
Car hire depositsOften required; protects your current account
Foreign spendingTravel credit cards have no fees
Large purchasesProtection + potential rewards
Building creditRegular use + repayment improves score

Use a Debit Card For

SituationWhy
ATM withdrawalsCredit card cash withdrawals are expensive
Small everyday purchasesIf you’re tempted to overspend
When you need to avoid debtCan’t spend more than you have
Direct debits/standing ordersUsually must be from bank account
If you won’t pay credit card in fullAvoid interest charges

Fraud Protection Comparison

ScenarioDebit CardCredit Card
Fraudulent transactionYour money is gone until resolvedBank’s money at risk, not yours
Resolution timeCan take days/weeks to get money backUsually immediate credit while investigating
LiabilityUsually £0 if you report promptlyUsually £0 if you report promptly
Impact on youMay not have funds for billsYour account unaffected

Example: Fraudster spends £1,000

  • Debit: Your account is £1,000 down while bank investigates (days/weeks)
  • Credit: Card issuer’s money at risk; your bank account untouched

Foreign Spending

Card TypeTypical Fees
Standard debit card2.75-3% foreign transaction fee
Standard credit card2.75-3% foreign transaction fee
Travel credit card0% foreign transaction fee
Travel debit card (Starling, Monzo, etc.)0% foreign transaction fee

For travel, choose a fee-free card — see our travel credit cards guide.

Credit Score Impact

ActionCredit CardDebit Card
Regular useBuilds credit historyUsually no impact
On-time paymentsImproves scoreNo impact
Missed paymentDamages scoreNo impact (unless overdraft)
ApplicationHard search (temporary dip)No search

If you want to build credit, you need a credit card (or loan). Debit cards generally don’t appear on credit reports.

Which Should You Choose?

Get a Credit Card If

SituationReason
You can pay the balance in full each monthFree borrowing + protection + rewards
You make large purchasesSection 75 protection
You want to build creditOnly way to build credit card history
You shop online frequentlyBetter fraud protection
You travel abroadFee-free travel cards available

Stick to Debit If

SituationReason
You might not pay in fullAvoid 20-30% interest
You struggle with overspendingCan’t spend more than you have
You have poor creditMay not be able to get a credit card yet
You only need basic transactionsSimpler

Best of Both Worlds

Many people use both:

  • Credit card for large/online purchases, travel, protected spending
  • Debit card for ATM withdrawals, everyday small purchases, as backup

Common Myths

MythReality
“Credit cards are dangerous”Only if misused — paid in full, they’re beneficial
“Debit cards are safer”Actually less protected than credit cards
“I don’t need a credit card”You may be missing out on protection and credit building
“Credit cards are only for people with savings”Credit builders exist for those starting out

Summary

For ThisUse This
Purchases over £100Credit card
Online shoppingCredit card
Travel and hotelsCredit card
ATM cashDebit card
Avoiding debt riskDebit card
Building creditCredit card

For more on choosing a credit card, see our how credit cards work guide and credit card eligibility guide.

Sources

  1. FCA — Credit cards
  2. MoneyHelper — Credit cards