The Chase 5/24 rule, explained: why your card order matters
Chase automatically denies most credit card applications from anyone who has opened five or more personal credit cards — from any bank, not just Chase — in the past 24 months. It’s unofficial, unpublished, and the single most important rule for sequencing your card applications.
How to count your 5/24 status
Count every personal credit card account opened in the last 24 months, across all issuers. Include store cards and cards you’ve since closed. Don’t count most small-business cards (they typically don’t appear on personal reports), authorized-user cards in some cases, or loans.
You can check your account-opening dates for free at AnnualCreditReport.com.
An example
| Card opened | Date | Counts toward 5/24 in June 2026? |
|---|---|---|
| Discover it | Mar 2024 | No — over 24 months ago |
| Amex Gold | Sep 2024 | Yes |
| Citi store card (closed) | Feb 2025 | Yes — closed cards still count |
| Business card | Jan 2026 | Usually no |
This person is at 2/24 and can open three more cards before hitting the limit.
Why this changes your application order
Chase cards are subject to the rule, but cards from other banks still add to your count. The standard advice: get the Chase cards you want first, while you’re under 5/24, then move to Amex, Capital One, and Citi, which have no equivalent hard cutoff.
What it means for newcomers
If you’re building credit from scratch, you’ll likely open a starter card or two early on — those count. Plan so that a slot is free when your profile is strong enough for a Sapphire-tier card, usually after about a year of history.
Bottom line
Before any application, count your last 24 months of card openings. If a Chase card is on your wishlist, it almost always belongs earlier in your sequence.