A secured credit card is a card account backed by a security deposit.
Secured credit card means a card account backed by a security deposit. The deposit helps reduce the issuer’s risk and often supports some or all of the account’s limit.
Secured cards matter because they give many borrowers an entry point into the credit system when approval for an Unsecured Credit Card would be difficult. They are common in credit-building and credit-rebuilding situations, often alongside products such as a Credit-Builder Loan.
They also matter because some borrowers assume “secured” means cheap or harmless. That is not automatically true. A secured card can still carry fees, a meaningful Annual Percentage Rate (APR), and the same reporting consequences as other card accounts if payments are missed.
Borrowers encounter secured cards when starting a file, rebuilding after past problems, or trying to move from limited approval options into more conventional card access. The account still functions as a Credit Card and Revolving Credit line, so it affects Credit Utilization and reporting like other cards.
The Security Deposit changes the risk structure for the issuer, but it does not remove the need for careful use and on-time payment.
A borrower deposits $300 to open a secured card with a similar limit. The borrower uses the card lightly and pays on time for several months. Over time, that account can help establish or rebuild positive credit history if handled well.
Secured credit card is not the same as prepaid spending. The borrower is still using credit, not simply spending down a stored-value balance.
It is also different from an Unsecured Credit Card, where the issuer generally extends the line without holding a matching deposit as direct security.