6/23/2026 at 5:20:03 PM
Reminder to the people reading this thread and overall comments, that in Europe everyone uses Debit Cards instead of Credit Cards.Credit Card in Europe is very much associated with Debt.
by cloudengineer94
6/23/2026 at 6:06:02 PM
Reminder to all commenters that Europe is not a single homogeneous country and somewhat diverse in various things, including payments and finance. Credit cards are definitely a thing in many European countries.by lxgr
6/23/2026 at 6:45:48 PM
In my corner of the world, credit cards were for buying stuff on the internet and travelling outside the EU. Now the net has evelved enough to accept our normal means of payment. I always feel insecure when using a credit card.by hyperman1
6/23/2026 at 10:18:27 PM
As a US-ian I feel exactly that way when using a debit card.A credit card, if misused, can run up your balance and then you dispute, and don't pay anything until it's resolved. A debit card, if misused, can drain your account and leave you penniless until it's resolved.
by margalabargala
6/24/2026 at 8:03:23 AM
Yep, that's why I always used CC and pay in full(until it become much more logical to pay the minimum and accumulate interest that is lower than the inflation).It's much better to be indebted when buying something simply because if something goes wrong its much easier to convince someone to take their thing back when you haven't paid yet than trying to convince someone to send your money back and accept a return.
by mrtksn
6/24/2026 at 4:14:59 PM
I've never seen a CC with an APR below 20%, which inflation has never hit in the US. But the logic is sound as long as your income is tracking inflation.Your second paragraph is accurate.
by margalabargala
6/23/2026 at 10:57:56 PM
I always find it funny that americans think the button to oppose a payement doesn't exists on my banking app because I have a debit card and not a credit card.by Kuinox
6/23/2026 at 11:12:30 PM
It's mostly about who possesses the money. With debit, the money is transferred. With credit, the money is scheduled for transfer, subject to my approval.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Possession_is_nine-tenths_of_t...
by rpdillon
6/23/2026 at 11:19:20 PM
This has basically nothing to do with it. A bank deposit is a liability of the bank, and possession is not a useful lens here.What matters are the legal and contractual rights and obligations you have against the card issuer. In the US, these are historically different for credit cards (Fed Regulation Z) and debit cards (Regulation E), but since it's now effectively the same two schemes running it all and imposing their additional liability protections (largely motivated by considerations of brand perception, which would suffer if the same logo sometimes confers weaker protections).
The main practical difference nowadays is that in the case of debit cards, you're out your own money for a few days, while with credit cards, the only thing that temporarily suffers is your open-to-buy/line of credit.
by lxgr
6/23/2026 at 11:35:26 PM
> The main practical difference nowadays is that in the case of debit cards, you're out your own money for a few days, while with credit cards, the only thing that temporarily suffers is your open-to-buy/line of creditRight, and this is GGP's main point
The risk to a debit card user in the US is higher because the money you need to pay your rent or mortgage may temporarily disappear due to fraud, and may take longer to resolve than your deadline with your landlord. When using a credit card, that risk is not on you.
by dmoy
6/24/2026 at 11:42:43 AM
Why would this risk be higher in the US than in Europe? Europeans usually pay their rent/mortgage using bank transfers too.by lxgr
6/24/2026 at 5:36:40 PM
The risk isn't bank transfers to your bank for your mortgage. The risk is card skimmers at a gas station or whatever. The theft isn't when you pay your rent, the theft is something preventing you from paying your rent, due to some totally unrelated prior transaction.I think the risk is higher in the US compared to Europe because Europe was way faster to roll out chip stuff, whereas in the US it's still somewhat common to have to use the mag stripe.
by dmoy
6/23/2026 at 11:38:30 PM
Ah, I see. This is about the prevailing consumer protections. In the US, debit is not treated with nearly as much privilege as the EU. While credit signals debt in the EU, debit signals poor financial situation in the US, since credit enjoys protections debit does not.by rpdillon
6/24/2026 at 12:11:36 AM
In your rush to dunk on Americans you misunderstood the comment.Everyone in America is perfectly aware that the "dispute" button exists.
Trouble is, the lag time between hitting the button and getting your money back can be weeks. With a credit card you are out zero money.
by margalabargala
6/24/2026 at 12:56:33 PM
The two times someone cloned my credit card were a) while travelling in the US; b) complaints that VISA didn’t refund. So there’s that.by port11
6/24/2026 at 4:10:43 PM
Visa isn't a party to your contract with your card issuing bank. Your bank is responsible for filing a dispute, representing it properly, and (according to applicable law and/or as a good business practice for somebody that wants to retain your business) potentially reimbursing you out of pocket if a given transaction has issuing bank fraud liability.by lxgr
6/24/2026 at 4:38:18 PM
Sure, but the fees I pay for go to Visa for, among others, combatting fraud and credit card cloning. I filled up my bank’s paperwork, I don’t know the inner details of their relationship with Visa.by port11
6/23/2026 at 10:32:40 PM
The fraud detection of the card processors is effective and they will disable a debit card before that happens. I've always had the money returned automatically the few times I've had one compromised.by kevin_thibedeau
6/23/2026 at 10:51:19 PM
Same fraud systems monitor credit cards except in the American case you get at worst 1% cash back so 1% off the purchase price of everything and if something does happen, and regardless of protections fraud still occurs, it’s the bank’s money that is gone and not yours.Separately the EU is a large collection of states and each one has its varying levels of participation and sophistication with payment processing. Apple and Google Pay are both widely used and that won’t change, and by and large there’s no good reason for Europeans to not accept American credit cards so they’ll continue to do so.
Anyone telling you differently either doesn’t have the slightest idea what they’re talking about or they’re just caught up in a pointless anti-American fervor. Even in countries such as France American Express is accepted in more places.
by ericmay
6/23/2026 at 11:26:55 PM
Accepting cards from US-controlled schemes is not an issue at all. The geopolitical issue is not having any alternative, and these US schemes being the only way to pay even in domestic transactions.Almost nobody considered this a problem until a few years ago, but the relevant EU stakeholders got pretty rattled recently [1], and my prediction is that this particular bell can't be un-rung.
[1] https://www.theguardian.com/law/2026/feb/18/international-cr...
by lxgr
6/24/2026 at 12:50:43 PM
Well it doesn’t matter whether it’s un-rung. Europe can develop payments tech, folks visiting continue to operate like they normally do. The US is increasingly accepting payment mechanisms and cards from other providers too. Continued competition is good here all else being close to equal.Each nation or economic block or alliance or whatever will have to decide which kinds of products and services they’ll want to protect or build in-house. While the EU lambasted the United States when it began taking measures to do what the EU is doing now, it’s encouraging to see the EU change course and start to protect its industries, though who knows how effective that will be. China is looming large over the EU, Germany in particular.
by ericmay
6/24/2026 at 9:46:30 AM
They are aware of it, but there is so much US dependency that its very difficult to reverse course let along unto what has been done. The EU's age verification app will only work on Google or Apple controlled phones. A lot of payments are done on phones. A lot of other things depend on phones too - my local bus company (in the UK) requires its mobile app for some types of tickets. I have had to use phone based ID verification already.by graemep
6/24/2026 at 12:25:27 AM
That's interesting argument. Here it is usual to have a daily limit on debit cards. You can not spend more money than that, so a thief can not drain your account. Also many banks give you multiple accounts (you can transfer between them instantly). The debit card is connected to only one of them, so if you keep part of your money on the other account, that couldn't be touched even if the card payment limit has technical issues.by raron
6/24/2026 at 1:01:52 AM
Multiple accounts (both debit and credit) are normal in the US as well, but I have never heard of a debit account here that has a daily spending limit.Sounds like the US and Euro systems work fine within their own borders. Solutions designed for one make less sense in the context of the other.
by margalabargala
6/24/2026 at 10:34:29 AM
Cards and accounts often allow the owner to set those limits for e.g. withdrawals or transfers etc. There's often a separate limit for home country and abroad. They're there to limit damage that might be caused by user error or stolen cards or something like that. (Or just to provide peace of mind.)by a96
6/24/2026 at 1:36:00 AM
It gets interesting when the two system interacts. Friends visiting the US told me that at the POS terminal they had to choose credit card despite paying with a Visa/Mastercard debit card issued by an European bank.By the way, here banks even have daily bank / wire transfer limit that can be changed only by a personal visit to a branch, so even if your online banking credentials are stolen, the attacker can not empty your account.
by raron
6/24/2026 at 4:14:55 PM
> Friends visiting the US told me that at the POS terminal they had to choose credit card despite paying with a Visa/Mastercard debit card issued by an European bank.The "credit" button in the US really means "use the Visa/Mastercard network and don't ask me for a PIN", as opposed to "feel free to ask me for my PIN and route the transaction over one of a dozen or so US domestic debit networks". The question doesn't even make sense for non-US debit cards.
by lxgr
6/24/2026 at 3:52:25 AM
> they had to choose credit cardAnd that doesn’t always work. For example, at a Chevron petrol station in California in the middle of nowhere we tried several European credit and debit cards, and nothing worked. At the end, the guy working there helped us with some prepaid option at the counter. He didn’t believe us until he tried himself that really none of our cards worked.
But the situation is way better than 5+ years ago. Back then, almost every second purchase of ours had some problem with our cards in the US. Now, we had like one or two in more than a week.
But of course, some car rental companies still pretend that they are generous that they allow debit cards. Not just in the US.
by ruszki
6/24/2026 at 1:13:13 AM
Wells Fargo for the longest time had a daily spending limit on its Check Cards and a daily withdrawal limit. If you had a Debit (not check card) your “spending limit” was your withdrawal limit.If you tried to make a purchase above the spending limit it was a hassle. I am old tho.
by JoeBOFH
6/24/2026 at 3:56:59 AM
Normally you don't have your savings connected to a debit card.by kyriakos
6/24/2026 at 4:20:32 AM
Maybe you don't.In the US it's common for much of one's money to be in a checking account, the same one to which your debit card is effective.
by margalabargala
6/24/2026 at 1:36:45 PM
The solution is not to misuse your card. Don't do business with shady companies- problem solved.by expedition32
6/24/2026 at 4:16:55 PM
Unfortunately, the reality is that rather than your card being directly misused by a "shady" company, it's more likely that most companies you transact with do not have perfect security and will suffer a data breach that may expose your payment information.by margalabargala
6/23/2026 at 7:13:12 PM
Pretty much all of the EU had Visa- and Mastercard-branded debit cards since the turn of the millennium, so one has been able to buy stuff from the net and travel abroad without use of a credit card for decades now.by TFNA
6/23/2026 at 6:45:05 PM
As an outsider: which countries lean which way? I'm curious how things trend where and I didn't even really know that debit was used by a majority in certain places (Countries? Regions? Historical based delimiters?).by PNewling
6/23/2026 at 7:12:07 PM
Germany is very debit-card oriented (with no interest of switching). The Netherlands seems similar. Eastern Europe and the Balkans are also mostly debit-card oriented, but people seem more open to switching to credit cards (if they can get one - especially the younger generation).Ireland and the U.K. seem much more credit-card oriented than rest of Europe. Turkey is also very CC oriented (kinda strange - was not expecting that).
by tlogan
6/23/2026 at 7:59:00 PM
In the UK people predominantly use debit cards but credit cards are widely available. Everyone gets a debit card with any current account (i.e. non-savings account). In March this year there were 2.3 billion debit card transactions vs 400 million credit card transactions according to this:https://www.ukfinance.org.uk/data-and-research/data/card-spe...
by physicsguy
6/24/2026 at 9:26:18 AM
Italy is also super oriented on debit cards. People call them "credit card" because they don't know the difference, or even "Bancomat" which is the brand name of the most used Italian debit card network.Italians don't really care about credit cards, they just want to pay with their "Bancomat" card.
by reddalo
6/23/2026 at 11:59:50 PM
The preferential treatment of credit cards for certain transactions influences how they're used in the UK.Suppose in January two people Carol and Dave bought a £250 August flight to Paris from some outfit that didn't do a great job hedging their fuel prices. Carol used her credit card, Dave used his Debit card. UK law says Carol's flight was bought by her bank, after all her bank handed over the money, Carol is on the hook to pay them back but didn't directly pay. But Dave bought his ticket, the bank isn't responsible.
Today the airline fails because their fuel costs blew up. UK law says Carol should be able to get her money back from the bank because they bought this ticket and now it won't work -- this is called "Section 75". Dave may have some protections via other consumer protection rules, but he's more likely to end up losing out.
The best chance for Dave might be "Chargeback" which is a card scheme which might let Dave tell his bank that he now wishes he didn't pay for the ticket. It's not very likely to work because January is a long time ago and so the bank will probably argue that Dave should have realised earlier that he didn't want to make this transaction. Because this flight touches the EU there are a bunch of extra protections which might help, none of them is as simple as Section 75.
The Section 75 protections mean Brits who are credit-worthy tend to pay for large purchases on a [credit] card even if they intend to pay it off immediately.
by tialaramex
6/24/2026 at 4:17:31 PM
> The Section 75 protections mean Brits who are credit-worthy tend to pay for large purchases on a [credit] card even if they intend to pay it off immediately.And Visa and Mastercard's global zero liability provisions protect everybody with a debit card, so de facto the difference is no longer relevant.
That said, some banks are pretty bad at making use of their dispute rights with the networks. I've seen several German issuers actually refuse to file "service not provided" disputes in case of a large airline bankruptcy a few years ago. (German bankruptcy managers can be somewhat intimidating rhetorically, but fortunately their personal opinions have no bearing on banking/payment laws.)
by lxgr
6/24/2026 at 12:04:56 PM
For what is worth, a few years ago, I was able to chargeback a significant furniture order after the company collapsed. It is indeed at the bank's discretion and my bank didn't really advertise the process, but the people in branch pointed me to the right place and the process was no fuss.So, no, you do not have the same legal protection as Section 75, but it is always worth a try.
by gpderetta
6/24/2026 at 4:56:33 AM
There's no reason Section 75 protections couldn't be extended to debit cards, except that in the mid-1970s banks were lobbying very hard for credit cards to become more legitimised and S75 was the successful result.The banks took on a little bit of risk and in return unlocked a free money generator.
On the contrary debit cards are revenue-neutral or even loss-making for them
by dingaling
6/23/2026 at 8:07:20 PM
It used to be like that in Germany, it changed quite a bit. My debit card now is refused more often than my master card when I’m in Germany. I do tend to stay in large cities and not in the country side though, so my perspective is not a statistic.But it definitely changed massively during Covid. Before Covid shops refusing _any_ card where still common (again, large cities is my spectrum) and debit card were accepted vastly more often than credit card.
by illiac786
6/24/2026 at 6:56:03 AM
Debit cards would still be used a lot more commonly than credit cards in Ireland. The UK is, I think, slightly different, due to a slightly unusual situation with disputes.by rsynnott
6/23/2026 at 10:24:12 PM
Some providers in the UK issue debit cards with limited interest-free overdraft and charge back features. So they are basically credit cards if you squint your eyes enough.by crvdgc
6/23/2026 at 8:11:23 PM
In Ireland and the UK, from experience, people use debit cards a lot more than credit cards.by surgical_fire
6/24/2026 at 9:07:39 AM
India has about a billion debit cards, but people mostly use them for ATM cash withdrawals, if that (banks used to give them by default during account opening, but have stopped this since UPI came into the picture). Only a single-digit percentage of people use credit cards, but they use them often and for relatively high-value transactions. The rewards game in the credit card space is slowly but surely reaching US levels, and they are associated more with stability and credit-worthiness since banks don't hand them out like candy, and India is, until recently, a debt-averse nation to revolve balances.Mostly people use UPI, which is equivalent to debit cards given that amounts go directly from one bank to another. But UPI also supports some credit cards and lines, so there's that.
by sometimes_all
6/24/2026 at 3:55:59 AM
Only time ever used a credit card was to rent a car in Italy cause they didn't accept debit cards.by kyriakos
6/23/2026 at 6:34:54 PM
> Credit cards are definitely a thing in many European countriesYes, a thing associated with debt.
I lived in the UK before Brexit, and that would be an example of such.
by ben_w
6/24/2026 at 9:40:25 AM
A lot of people in the UK use credit cards for the extra legal protections, and for cash back and reward schemes.The UK has pay by bank, which is very like digital cash, and can be used online, but its much less used than cards are.
by graemep
6/23/2026 at 6:36:17 PM
You are of course free to extrapolate your experience from a single European country to the whole continent, but it's still not a coherent argument for or against anything.by lxgr
6/23/2026 at 6:36:07 PM
which ones use Credit Cards to a larger degree than Debit Cards, like they do in the US?by xquce
6/24/2026 at 6:58:11 AM
I don't think anywhere does. In general, cards in Europe don't really give significant rewards (because interchange, paid ultimately by the merchant, is capped at 0.3%, whereas in the US it can be upwards of 3% for certain high-end cards). The only reason that people who don't need the credit line use them in the US is the rewards schemes.by rsynnott
6/23/2026 at 6:37:00 PM
That's not what GP said. They claimed that "everyone" in Europe uses debit cards, and that's just not true.by lxgr
6/23/2026 at 11:16:22 PM
Umm, no? Citation needed.by guerrilla
6/23/2026 at 11:28:56 PM
For what? Credit cards existing in Europe and having more than zero users? I trust that Google will serve you well if you really don't believe me.by lxgr
6/24/2026 at 9:11:04 AM
One should also bear in mind that the technical difference between Debit and Credit cards is quite blurry in the EU. Like, a card can officially be of the Debit kind, but have all the features of a Credit card enabled. Which is actually and typically the case.And for example in Ukraine the situation is exactly the opposite: cards issued are typically Credit cards, but with all features of credit cards turned off which effectively makes them debit cards.
by egorfine
6/24/2026 at 12:57:20 PM
Great point. N26 “credit” cards are debit cards with embossed letters in them and a CVV for buying online. Same with my Belgian bank.by port11
6/23/2026 at 6:20:52 PM
Not everyone. We use both and mostly credit card for online payments that we pay off at the end of the month. It has a limit and it is easier deal with potential fraud vs a debit card where your own money goes. But does it matter? All my debit cards are Visa and Mastercard anyway.by anygivnthursday
6/24/2026 at 6:09:35 AM
My debit card is both MasterCard and CB. And a few months ago I noticed that I could pick either network when paying online.by BlueTemplar
6/23/2026 at 8:59:01 PM
That reads like "in Europe" (which is a pretty diverse place? "everyone thinks debit is credit and credit is debit"?I don't think that's the case.
by subscribed
6/23/2026 at 6:03:03 PM
And even when you have a credit card, it might act like a debit card (every payment shows as debit in your banking app, even if you really pay on the 10th of the month or something).by orwin
6/23/2026 at 6:05:00 PM
I'm in Europe and I can't say this is the case at all. I've never heard anyone express such an idea.by Oarch
6/23/2026 at 6:13:19 PM
Did you grow up in Europe?by amelius
6/23/2026 at 9:37:20 PM
I didby Oarch
6/23/2026 at 7:17:44 PM
It is in germany.by OoooooooO
6/23/2026 at 6:07:16 PM
It is a prevalent view among the lower socioeconomic classes.by l23k4
6/23/2026 at 6:45:35 PM
Among the middle and higher as well.by gpvos
6/23/2026 at 8:06:47 PM
The problem as I see it is that you pay your credit card bill only once a month which gives you no bearing on your effective balance. This is mostly a problem for lower and middle income people who live from paycheck to paycheck.by amelius
6/23/2026 at 8:19:49 PM
Middle and higher income people dont need debt on monthly basis and see not having that debt as personal virtue.It just makes no sense to not pay things right away.
by watwut
6/24/2026 at 7:38:33 AM
I would argue the opposite, makes no sense to pay right away when you can pay with no interest 15 days later on average.In an inflationary fiat currency system it's always better to defer payment assuming you can manage your cashflow and you're living hand to mouth
by ifwinterco
6/24/2026 at 8:58:17 AM
> makes no sense to pay right away when you can pay with no interest 15 days later on average.Why in a pray tell would you favor late payment? Why would I create myself a chore for an end of a month if I can just pop a card, pay and see the transaction in e-banking right away? If it is auto-charge by the end of month, why not charge it right away?
You are gaining absolutely nothing.
> In an inflationary fiat currency system it's always better to defer payment assuming you can manage your cashflow and you're living hand to mouth
What are you talking about here. We are talking about people paying with euros.
by watwut
6/24/2026 at 7:57:21 PM
Say you spend €1000 per month. If you use a credit card, you can earn interest on that for an month and only need the money in your current account on the day you pay.So at 5% annual interest that’s about €4. So yes it’s not huge, but that’s every month for your whole life and it compounds over time.
The benefit is small (it won’t make or break your finances) but real.
That’s what I mean by “inflationary fiat currency” - you are paying in something that constantly loses value. Therefore rationally, it makes sense to pay as late as possible
by ifwinterco
6/24/2026 at 10:47:27 AM
> Why would I create myself a chore for an end of a monthDo they not have direct debit where you live?
>If it is auto-charge by the end of month, why not charge it right away?
Because there's no way I'm going to keep anywhere close to that much money on my debit card? Because the credit card won't get randomly locked while I'm trying to pay a 40k euro hotel room bill in Asia? Or if it does, I can switch to another credit card or deal with reasonable customer service.
If you're only making small payments, of course it doesn't matter. If you're regularly spending significant amounts of money, doing so with a debit card will be a huge pain in the ass and an unnecessary risk.
by l23k4
6/23/2026 at 8:53:42 PM
Well in some cases paying with a credit card is the only option.by amelius
6/23/2026 at 10:43:28 PM
Notably, the IRS refused COVID relief applications using a debit card for identity. Stupid as fuck policy considering they're all connected to the main two credit processors.by kevin_thibedeau
6/23/2026 at 10:33:31 PM
Haven't run into that in Europe.by Hikikomori
6/24/2026 at 7:46:50 AM
Some Europeans refer to girocards as "debit cards" and everything else incorrectly as "credit cards"by l23k4
6/24/2026 at 9:42:07 AM
Some Europeans meaning people in Germany? Most people have debit cards from our normal banks here, credit cards are generally associated with companies like Revolut or Klarna, as they push ads for getting credit cards.by Hikikomori
6/24/2026 at 10:43:35 AM
> Some Europeans meaning people in Germany?I guess, I haven't really kept track, but I've observed this many times from different people.
> credit cards are generally associated with companies like Revolut
That's surprising. Revolut only offers credit cards in a couple of countries, and has only done so for a rather short period of time.
by l23k4
6/24/2026 at 3:04:00 PM
Maybe it was remember I was thinking of, there's a few that push credit card with adsby Hikikomori
6/23/2026 at 6:46:38 PM
Note to Europeans:Americans use credit cards and rarely debit cards because here the terms on debit cards are so much worse (for contesting charges, etc), so debit cards never really caught on for anything more than withdrawing cash.
In the US, users of debit cards are assumed to be uncreditworthy, because debit cards in the US have such bad T&C's that poor credit score is the main reason folks use them here.
by paulsutter
6/23/2026 at 5:22:22 PM
The article uses the term credit card for apparently no reason, because Visa and Mastercard also support debit cards. The EU is probably more concerned about Visa and Mastercard payment networks being under the control of American leaders.by lotsofpulp
6/23/2026 at 6:10:20 PM
We call every card a credit card even if most of them are actually debit.by Muromec
6/23/2026 at 6:30:08 PM
we dont in spain, we call it "tarjeta de debito" and "tarjeta de credito" or just "la tarjeta" or the card.by calgoo
6/23/2026 at 6:53:40 PM
And in Italy many people say Bancomat when they want to pay with the card even if they don't have a card with that circuit anymore.by cuvert
6/23/2026 at 9:42:57 PM
It used to be the "blue card" in France (Carte Bleu)by touristtam
6/24/2026 at 6:12:06 AM
That network still exists, and can now even be used preferentially over Visa/MasterCard, in particular when paying online.by BlueTemplar
6/23/2026 at 6:02:18 PM
Yep, although a huge % of banks are issuing Visa and MasterCard debit cards as default nowadays.by izacus
6/23/2026 at 10:43:38 PM
Amazes me how London lost the plot. 30 years ago access, switch, access etc were common, but visa and mastercard managed to take over.by hdgvhicv
6/23/2026 at 10:53:04 PM
Switch merged with Maestro, which was owned by Mastercard, to become Switch-Maestro, which eventually became Mastercard Debit.by teamonkey
6/23/2026 at 6:27:35 PM
Yes. Most people here (Austria) use their mastercard debit card to pay cashless. You get them at 14 already IIRC.by preisschild
6/23/2026 at 6:45:21 PM
which is in fact a massive pain in the ass, because car rentals and hotels often require credit cards to make reservations (at least in my experience...)by tomp
6/23/2026 at 10:07:18 PM
I've almost always found a debit card works in those cases.by verzali
6/23/2026 at 11:35:51 PM
I've heard stories like "fine, we'll take your debit card, but only if you also pay a non-reimboursable $$$ deposit in cash" for car rental. (Mostly in central/eastern Europe.)(From what I was told, the thing in favor of a credit card is that the rental agency can put a hold on the security deposit for much longer than on a debit card: a few weeks vs a few days).
by jakub_g
6/24/2026 at 8:17:52 AM
Custom in Europe - where debit cards are the most common - is to settle the hotel bill on check-in.by everfrustrated
6/24/2026 at 9:08:25 AM
Obviously. Because why would a rental company turn down > 90% of the customers?by egorfine
6/23/2026 at 11:35:15 PM
Credit Card is everywhere associated with debtby bdangubic
6/24/2026 at 12:23:20 AM
In the US, having debt is seen as a good thing, as long as you stay current on payments. Not having debt gives you a lower credit score than having debt, which send kind of fucked up to me.by amanaplanacanal
6/24/2026 at 1:13:10 AM
That's a common misconception. Credit score is positively correlated with paying on time, having high available credit relative to usage, and the age of your oldest credit account.However, using more of your cards' limit (a high debt utilization ratio) actually reduces your score.
On-time payments are only one factor in your score. Depending on the model it may only account for 20-30% of the score. Using your cards a few times a year may satisfy the criteria. You don't have to take on any debt to have a high credit score.
by triceratops
6/24/2026 at 12:30:18 PM
can 100% confirm this on a personal level, outside of mortgage I have no credit card balances (I use CC extensively but always pay the full balance) and have had 835+ score for years now.by bdangubic
6/24/2026 at 3:03:58 PM
Yes. They want you to have the mortgage and the cards, and the record of paying them on time. If you had no mortgage and never had the credit cards, your score would be much lower.by amanaplanacanal
6/24/2026 at 3:34:24 PM
I've had a high score with only credit cards and low usage.by triceratops
6/24/2026 at 10:42:11 AM
That's what it technically is. Credit.by a96
6/23/2026 at 6:03:20 PM
Slowly coming to a close in the US also.Some places already of course not accepting Amex, some places not accepting Visa Infinites (CSR, Venture, etc).
The future of banking is direct. The days of free rewards at a loss are gone as premium US cards are nearing the $1,000 AF mark for luxury coupons.
by testfrequency
6/23/2026 at 10:59:33 PM
Which places are distinguishing high-fee Visa cards?by twoodfin
6/24/2026 at 9:58:08 AM
The legislation has been in the works for years now (not fully approved just yet). It’s why many US banks all are trying to get around issuers any way possible now.https://www.redbridgedta.com/us/market-intelligence/the-visa...
I am admittedly having trouble finding where I’ve seen it brought up, but some online forums I lurk on for finance have had stories of people being denied from using specifically Visa Infinite branded credit cards. There’s also been stories of businesses not accepting Chase cards flat out, which I assume is to also curb the higher costs they incur from the premium Chase cards.
Europe has long had laws in place that have hard caps set at 0.3% and 0.2% respectively for credit or debit cards. The US has been milking this with uncapped 3.0%+ fees, which is why the credit cards there drive so much profit - at the expense of every business owner.
by testfrequency
6/23/2026 at 6:19:39 PM
Eu: Most of the people I know use debit rather than credit because we can manage our finances.by Ylpertnodi
6/23/2026 at 8:31:31 PM
Rest of the world: most of us figured out how to use credit as a tool without tumbling into a spending pit. Takes a bit of discipline, sure but not impossible."I use debit because I can manage my finances" reads as "I don't trust myself with credit." If credit is a trap you have to avoid, that's not the flex you think it is.
It's a tool. Some people use it. Some people are scared of it.
by urda
6/23/2026 at 7:21:12 PM
I only use CC, to earn airline points (based in Sweden). But I always pay the entire amount due at the end of the interest-free period, so I never pay interest.I also like the fact that using a CC comes with better buyer protection than debit cards.
by imartin2k
6/23/2026 at 9:53:32 PM
Credit Cards improve your working capital position, interest free. Most people do not understand finance which is why debit cards are the "safer" choice.by greyw
6/23/2026 at 6:27:38 PM
How exactly does “we can manage our finances” follow from picking debit over credit?by ZekeSulastin
6/23/2026 at 6:37:16 PM
Can't go into debt if you don't have a line of credit.by ben_w
6/23/2026 at 7:16:38 PM
If one is capable of managing one's finances (and paying the card off in full every month), credit cards are a useful tool. They're a problem if one can't manage one's finances.by greyface-
6/23/2026 at 7:53:56 PM
It is interesting that both options of either not using CC entirely or using CC but paying it off by the end of the month are equivalent, but you’ve somehow reframe the second ine as some virtuous skill one have to master (I’m not just buying bread, I’m also managing my finances by repaying the value of it in full by the end of the month to avoid being charged for interest and simultaneously improving my credit score).Business model of banks in regard to CC are preying on people not paying it all in full for various reasons.
by hkpack
6/23/2026 at 8:10:08 PM
Financially, they're not equivalent. If you buy your bread on credit, you get an interest-free loan, and benefit from the time value of the money that you otherwise would have paid immediately. As you correctly point out, this value comes from those fleeced by the arrangement. If my comment attributed any moral valence to the two options, that was unintentional.by greyface-
6/23/2026 at 10:41:06 PM
That only works if you keep less money than your monthly spend in high interest accounts. I always have a cushion on the account linked to the card. The only benefit of credit in the US is rewards cards that transfer wealth from those with poor discipline and financial illiteracy.by kevin_thibedeau
6/23/2026 at 10:26:04 PM
A person able to manage their finances would have no issue using a credit card.It makes a lot of sense to avoid them if you know you are incapable of managing your finances, though.
by margalabargala
6/24/2026 at 1:14:56 AM
You should learn why people really use credit cards in North America instead of making generalizations.by triceratops
6/24/2026 at 8:09:32 AM
If you can manage your finances then delaying all purchase payments by 30 days for 0% interest is a no brainer. And then all the other perks that come with some cards, like accruing some small percentage of your transactions as points, extended warranty protection, ability to request charge backs if necessary, etc.by IncreasePosts
6/23/2026 at 11:15:41 PM
[dead]by stefantalpalaru
6/23/2026 at 6:02:15 PM
And most Europeans that have a credit-card need to pay them off at the end of the month. Technically they are charge cards. Unlike a traditional credit card, a charge card does not allow you to carry a revolving balance.by retired
6/23/2026 at 6:32:57 PM
This is not true. Plenty of Europeans have credit cards which work exactly like US credit cards.The main difference between credit cards in Europe and in the US is that poor people can't get them here.
by nswango
6/24/2026 at 7:02:22 AM
> The main difference between credit cards in Europe and in the US is that poor people can't get them here.Nah, really the main difference is that the EU caps interchange (paid ultimately by the merchant) at 0.3%, whereas it can be upwards of 3% in the US for high-end cards. Without big interchange earnings, there's little reason for issuers to push credit cards, and they're less attractive to consumers (interchange pays for 'reward' schemes).
by rsynnott
6/24/2026 at 6:54:20 AM
I was denied credit card after changing jobs. I did have some student debt, but small amount on small payment and rates were low. Also had other credit card but not high limit. Nothing in negative credit history.Did get the same card a few months later after probationary period. But yeah even without significant existing debt you can get denied in Europe.
by Ekaros
6/23/2026 at 6:39:43 PM
Let's not pretend that predatory lending is not a thing in at least some EU countries as well, just because it takes other forms (installment payments, buy now pay later etc.), but as a general trend, I'd agree that it's much less common.by lxgr
6/23/2026 at 10:46:04 PM
I have to pay it off each month unless I want the high interest rates (20%? Not sure, a direct debit clears it monthly after payday and the 1% cashback is credited each yearby hdgvhicv
6/24/2026 at 7:00:20 AM
This is very unusual these days.by rsynnott
6/23/2026 at 6:08:32 PM
Can we please cool it with the sweeping "most/all of Europe" assertions? This, just like credit use overall, is also highly country/region specific.by lxgr