The 5/24 rule, explained

6 min read · Updated June 2026

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If you spend any time around points-and-miles communities, you'll bump into a phrase that sounds like a secret handshake: 5/24. It isn't printed in any cardmember agreement, but it shapes the order serious card collectors apply in more than almost any other guideline. Here's what it means, how to count your own number, and why it pushes so many people to start with one issuer before all the others.

What 5/24 actually is

5/24 is an unofficial guideline widely observed at Chase: if you've opened five or more new personal credit cards in the past roughly 24 months — from any bank, not just Chase — Chase will generally decline your application for a new card. Two things make it unusual:

Because it's community-observed rather than documented, treat it as a strong pattern rather than a hard contract. The threshold and the cards it applies to have shifted before and could shift again.

How to count your number

The math is simpler than the name suggests. Look back over the last 24 months and count how many new personal credit card accounts you've opened. Five or more means you're "at" or "over" 5/24; four or fewer means you're "under." A few clarifications that matter:

What counts and what usually doesn't

Most new personal credit cards from any bank add to your count. The edge cases are where people get tripped up:

Because the details differ by issuer and change over time, the safest move is to read your own credit report rather than rely on rules of thumb for which specific cards count.

Why people apply for Chase cards first

Here's the strategic punchline. Since 5/24 only governs Chase approvals — and Chase's lineup includes some of the most valuable cards and transferable points around — many people deliberately get the Chase cards they want while they're still under 5/24, then move on to issuers that don't enforce a comparable limit.

If you open five cards from other banks first, you can lock yourself out of Chase for two years without realizing it. Sequencing the other way — Chase first, everyone else after — keeps the most restrictive door open while you're still eligible to walk through it. This is the single biggest reason 5/24 belongs in any conversation about building a card stack.

How to figure out your own number

You don't have to guess. To get an accurate count:

That rolling nature is worth internalizing: 5/24 is not a permanent verdict. If you're over it, the usual advice is to pause new applications and let the oldest cards age out until you're back under.

A standing caution

Everything here describes a pattern, not a published policy. Issuer underwriting changes quietly and without notice, the threshold could move, and approvals always factor in your wider credit profile too. Use 5/24 to sequence your applications and avoid obvious mistakes — but don't treat a calculated count as a guarantee of approval or denial.

Keeping an accurate, rolling 5/24 count by hand is tedious, which is exactly why cardful tracks the open dates in your wallet and tells you where you stand before you apply — so the order you add cards is a choice you make on purpose, not a corner you back into.

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