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How Long to Wait Between Credit Card Applications in Canada

Updated

ScenarioRecommended WaitWhy
Between regular applications3–6 monthsMinimizes score impact, shows stable credit
After a rejection6+ monthsAddress the reason for rejection first
After opening a new card3–6 monthsLet new account age and score recover
After a hard inquiry3–6 monthsInquiry impact peaks in first 6 months
Credit churning (advanced)3–6 months per cardBalances score impact with signup bonuses

How Hard Inquiries Affect Your Credit Score

FactorDetails
Score drop per inquiry5–10 points (typically)
How long on report (Canada)3 years (Equifax), 3 years (TransUnion)
How long it affects scoreMost impact in first 6–12 months, diminishes over time
Multiple inquiries for same productMay be combined into one if within 14–45 days (mortgages, car loans — NOT credit cards)
Credit card inquiriesEach application counts as a separate inquiry

Impact Timeline

Time After InquiryScore Impact
0–3 monthsFull impact (5–10 points)
3–6 monthsModerate impact (3–7 points)
6–12 monthsMinimal impact (1–3 points)
12–24 monthsVery little impact
24–36 monthsFalls off report

What Lenders See When You Apply

SignalLender Interpretation
0 inquiries in 6 monthsGood — stable credit behaviour
1–2 inquiries in 6 monthsNormal — acceptable
3–4 inquiries in 6 monthsCaution — might be taking on too much credit
5+ inquiries in 6 monthsRed flag — possible financial stress or credit seeking

Factors That Affect Approval

FactorWeightWhat Lenders Want
Credit scoreHigh650+ for most cards, 700+ for premium cards
IncomeHighSufficient to support credit limits
Recent inquiriesMediumFewer is better
Credit utilizationHighUnder 30% of total available credit
Payment historyHighestNo missed payments
Length of credit historyMediumLonger is better (2+ years ideal)
Existing relationshipLow-mediumSome banks favour existing clients

Minimum Credit Scores by Card Type

Card TypeMinimum Score (approx.)Recommended Score
Secured credit cardNo minimum (guaranteed)Any
Student credit card600+650+
Basic no-fee card620+660+
Standard rewards card650+680+
Premium rewards card700+720+
Premium travel card720+740+

Best Strategy for Multiple Applications

If You Want 2–3 New Cards This Year

MonthActionNotes
1Apply for most-wanted cardBest approval odds with clean inquiry history
2–4Use new card, pay in full, waitLet credit score recover
5Apply for second cardScore has partially recovered
6–8Use both cards, pay in full, waitInquiries aging off
9Apply for third card (optional)Only if score is healthy

If You Were Rejected

StepAction
1Call the issuer’s reconsideration line — ask why you were declined
2Check your credit report for errors (free at Equifax.ca or TransUnion.ca)
3Address the reason for rejection (pay down debt, fix errors, increase income)
4Wait 6+ months before reapplying
5Apply for a card that matches your credit profile

Hard Inquiry vs Soft Inquiry

FeatureHard InquirySoft Inquiry
Triggered byCredit card application, loan applicationPre-approval check, credit monitoring, employer check
Affects credit score✅ Yes (5–10 points)❌ No
Visible to other lenders✅ Yes❌ No
Requires your consent✅ YesNot always
Time on report3 years (Canada)Not reported to other lenders
ExamplesApplying for a credit card, mortgage, car loanChecking your own credit, pre-qualified offers

Tips to Maximize Approval Odds

TipWhy It Helps
Check pre-approval offers firstSoft inquiry only — no score impact
Apply with your primary bankExisting relationship improves odds
Ensure income meets requirementsSome premium cards have minimum income requirements
Lower your credit utilization before applyingUnder 30%, ideally under 10%
Don’t apply for multiple cards on the same dayEach inquiry is separate; multiple signals risk
Apply mid-weekUnderwriting teams are fully staffed (anecdotal)
Be honest on your applicationOverstating income can lead to problems later