The news: Credit card issuers can cement top-of-wallet status by personalization and perks, especially for millennials and Gen Zers, per a PYMNTS Intelligence and i2c joint report.
Card portfolio: Gen Zers and millennials keep slimmer card portfolios, with only 49% of millennials and 29% of Gen Zers owning three or more cards, compared with 57% for boomers.
Spending habits: Just 34% of Gen Zers reach for their primary card for everyday purchases, versus 45% for baby boomers—even though Gen Zers tend to use a much larger share of their primary card’s credit limit, at 30% and 16%, respectively.
- That’s because Gen Zers—with their slimmer credit profiles—are more likely to use entry-level cards with lower credit limits.
- Boomers and other generations aren’t typically as constrained by the lack of credit history to qualify for more elite cards—and can spread that spend across a range of favorable credit cards for points and perks.
Issuers could snatch more of Gen Zers’ spend if they offered credit line increases: 35.7% of Gen Z cardholders said they would use their primary card more often if they had higher credit limits.
Other winning strategies: 47.7% of Gen Z consumers want more control over their payments. One in 4 Gen Zers want the power to select different financing options—debit, credit, or card-linked installments—at the time of transaction instead of going back retroactively after the charge has posted.
Young consumers also said spending insight tools (16.6%) and pre-set spending limits (13.5%) would get them to use their primary card more often.
Our take: To meet young consumers’ needs, issuers need to play up the non-rewards features that cardholders crave—higher credit limits coupled with tools to help cardholders make smart spending decisions.
As this demographic ages, issuers should also advertise a clear upgrade path as young consumers develop richer credit histories and gain more spending power—ensuring that Gen Zers upgrade within their card portfolio rather than switching to a rival issuer.