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Home » Parents are authorizing their young kids, including toddlers, on credit and debit cards. Here’s why.
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Parents are authorizing their young kids, including toddlers, on credit and debit cards. Here’s why.

Riley Moore | Debt AgentBy Riley Moore | Debt AgentJune 11, 2025No Comments2 Mins Read
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A survey from LendingTree shows about one-in-four parents have authorized a child under the age of 18 on their credit or debit card in an effort to give their kids a head start on establishing their credit rating.

While Shannon Ho plays pretend shopping with her daughters — Aria, 2, and Gemma, 1 — she’s also teaching valuable life lessons about money at a young age.

The two young children have two credit cards each. Ho and her husband, Jeremy, added both daughters as authorized users on their existing card accounts.

“I figured why not? My parents did it for me when I was a kid. So, I did the same for my girls,” she said. “My 1-year-old has no idea what’s going on. My 2-year-old, however, I do take her to Target every week to buy her cheese crackers and her snacks and she picks two items and she gets to pay. She taps and pays.”  

With each tap, Aria is building her credit history, which will help determine her credit score.

For Ho, it’s also about her children learning the value of a dollar.

“It’s a habit we build from a young age to spend only what you are given or what you can afford and nothing more,” she said.

Why your credit score matters

Financial advisor Winnie Sun said it’s never too early to start building your credit, adding that many banks, including Capital One, Bank of America and Chase, allow kids to be authorized card users as long as they have a Social Security number.

Sun described it as “your financial GPA.”

“If you have a good one, that enables you better rates on your mortgage, better rates on your car loan … and most importantly, a lot of employers are actually looking for a high credit score in order to give you that next job too.”

If you decide to start helping build your child’s credit score, remember these tips:

Pay your bill in full and on-time every month to avoid passing down a negative credit scoreMonitor your bills to ensure there are no unapproved purchases

More from CBS News

Ash-har Quraishi

Ash-har Quraishi is a consumer correspondent based in Chicago. He is an Emmy Award-winning journalist with more than 25 years of local, national, international and investigative reporting experience. His work has been featured on CNN, Al Jazeera, The PBS NewsHour, A&E, “The Oprah Winfrey Show” and in The New York Times.



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