Want to build credit using someone else’s good history? Two common strategies are becoming an authorized user or opening a joint account. Both can work, but they carry very different levels of risk, responsibility, and reward.
Here’s how they compare — and which one makes sense for your situation.
Authorized User: The Basics
An authorized user is added to someone else’s existing credit card account. You get a card with your name on it, but the primary cardholder is legally responsible for all charges.
How it builds credit:
- The entire account history (age, payment history, utilization) appears on your credit report
- Most major issuers report authorized users to all three bureaus
- You benefit from the primary cardholder’s good habits without being liable for the debt
What you can do: Make purchases with the card
What you can’t do: Request credit limit increases, make account changes, or add other authorized users
Joint Account: The Basics
A joint account is opened by two people who share equal legal responsibility for the debt. Both applicants’ credit histories are considered during approval, and the account appears on both credit reports.
How it builds credit:
- The account appears on both cardholders’ credit reports equally
- Both people are fully responsible for the entire balance
- Both benefit from (or suffer from) the account’s activity
Important note: Joint credit card accounts are increasingly rare. Most major issuers (Chase, Amex, Capital One) no longer offer them. Joint accounts are more common for loans, mortgages, and some credit union cards.
Head-to-Head Comparison
| Factor | Authorized User | Joint Account |
|---|---|---|
| Legal liability | None — primary holder is responsible | Full — both equally liable |
| Credit building speed | Fast — inherits full account history | Fast — new account for both |
| Credit report impact | Account appears on your report | Account appears on both reports |
| Risk to you | Low — can be removed anytime | High — stuck until account is closed |
| Risk to other person | Medium — liable for your charges | High — liable for all charges |
| Availability | Widely available | Rare for credit cards |
| Removal difficulty | Easy — primary can remove you | Hard — may require closing account |
| Approval required | No credit check for authorized user | Both applicants are credit-checked |
Which Builds Credit Faster?
Authorized user wins for speed. Here’s why:
When you’re added as an authorized user, the account’s entire history is backdated on your credit report. If the primary cardholder has had the account for 10 years with perfect payments, you instantly inherit that 10-year history.
A joint account starts from the account’s open date — it only builds history going forward.
That said, both methods impact the same credit factors:
- Payment history (35% of FICO) — both report on-time/late payments
- Credit utilization (30%) — both affect your utilization ratio
- Length of history (15%) — authorized user can inherit years; joint starts fresh
- Credit mix (10%) — both add a revolving account
When to Choose Authorized User
- Building credit for the first time — lowest risk way to establish history
- You’re under 21 — easier than qualifying for your own card
- You want to boost your score quickly — inheriting a long, clean history is the fastest path
- You trust the primary cardholder — their behavior directly affects your score
- You want an exit option — you (or the primary) can remove authorized user status anytime
When to Choose a Joint Account
- You’re married and want shared finances — equal ownership makes sense
- Both people need to build credit equally — authorized users are somewhat “passive”
- You can’t find someone to add you as an authorized user
- You want full account control — authorized users have limited access
The Risks Nobody Talks About
Authorized User Risks
- If the primary runs up debt or misses payments, your score suffers
- The primary can remove you without notice
- Some lenders discount authorized user accounts when evaluating your application
Joint Account Risks
- Divorce or breakup — you’re both legally liable regardless of relationship status
- No easy exit — you can’t simply “remove” yourself from a joint account
- If the other person maxes out the card, you’re equally responsible
- Closing the account affects both credit reports (average age of accounts drops)
Pro Tips for Each Strategy
If You Become an Authorized User:
- Choose someone with a card that’s at least 3-5 years old with perfect payment history
- Make sure their utilization is consistently low — ideally under 10%. Their utilization becomes yours.
- Confirm the issuer reports authorized users to all three bureaus
- You don’t need to use the card — just being on the account builds credit
- Plan your exit — after 12-18 months, you should qualify for your own cards
If You Open a Joint Account:
- Only do this with someone you deeply trust (spouse, long-term partner)
- Set clear spending rules and limits in advance
- Both people should monitor the account regularly
- Have a plan for what happens if the relationship ends
FAQ
Can I build a 700+ credit score as an authorized user?
Yes, if the account has a long history, perfect payments, and low utilization. Combined with time, many authorized users see scores above 700 within 6-12 months.
Does removing myself as an authorized user hurt my credit?
It can — the account’s positive history will be removed from your report. If it was your oldest account, your average age of accounts will drop. Time the removal strategically.
Can both people on a joint account build credit independently?
Yes — the account reports to both credit files independently. Each person builds their own credit history from the shared account.
Is being an authorized user “cheating?”
No — it’s a legitimate credit-building strategy. However, some mortgage lenders may disregard authorized user accounts when underwriting. For most purposes, it’s fully recognized.
The Bottom Line
For most people, authorized user is the better choice. It’s lower risk, widely available, provides instant history, and has a clean exit strategy. Joint accounts make sense for committed partners sharing finances, but the risks are significantly higher.
Whichever path you choose, the fundamentals are the same: keep utilization low, never miss a payment, and use it as a stepping stone to your own credit accounts.