Chase 5/24 Rule Explained: Which Cards Count and Why
Chase 5/24 Rule Explained: Which Cards Count and Why
Chase’s 5/24 rule shapes whether you’ll be approved for many of its most valuable credit cards. In short: if five or more personal credit cards have been opened on your credit report in the last 24 months, Chase will typically deny new applications for most of its cards. Personal cards that show up on your credit report usually count; most business cards do not. Authorized user lines often count if they appear on your report; loans and denied applications do not. While the policy is unofficial, it’s widely observed across the points community and financial media, and mastering it helps you prioritize high‑value Chase approvals early in your card strategy (see Business Insider’s overview of the 5/24 rule and consistent enforcement, and The Points Guy’s 5/24 guide for scope and timing). At Points and Perks Guide, we recommend mapping your last 24 months of new accounts before you apply so you can prioritize Chase approvals up front.
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