📚 Guide + live tool — not just an article

How to choose the right credit card

A gentle, practical guide: a little history, how Visa and Mastercard work, how banks use them — plus tips to maximize benefits and stay aware of risks. At the end — a live tool to help you choose.

How the Credit Card Network Was Born

From risky cash and store-only cards to Visa, Mastercard, and the system we use today — one story in six steps. It started with Diners Club (1950): dine now, pay at month’s end.

1950s The Problem

Cash was risky; every store had its own card — no universal way to pay.

1958 The Idea

BankAmericard — one card, many stores; the bank lends to you and pays the merchant.

1966 The Network

Interbank (later Mastercard) — banks teamed up so any store accepts any bank’s card.

1970+ Goes Global

BankAmericard became Visa — banks don’t “be” Visa; they use the network worldwide.

Israel Local Market

Banks and issuers Isracard, Cal, MAX — with or without a bank account. MyAshrai compares both.

Today The Deal

Store pays a small fee, bank lends and earns APR, buyer gets safe instant convenience.

What is Visa? What is Mastercard?

💳 Visa

Visa is not a bank. It’s a payment network — infrastructure that moves money between your bank, the merchant, and the merchant’s bank. It grew out of Bank of America’s BankAmericard.

💳 Mastercard

Mastercard is also a network, not a bank. It started as a bank coalition. Today both are global — most Israeli cards carry one of them (or Amex / Diners).

Important: The logo on your card (Visa / Mastercard) shows where it works — not who sets interest, fees, or rewards. That’s the issuer: your bank or card company.

How banks use networks — how it all works

  1. Bank extends credit — Through your card you get a credit line; the bank approves each purchase.
  2. You spend — You pay with the card; it feels like cash, but it’s really a short-term loan from the bank.
  3. Bank pays the merchant — The bank transfers money to the merchant (via Visa/Mastercard and payment processors).
  4. You pay the bank back — Monthly bill; pay in full and you usually owe no interest; minimum only — interest on the balance.

Debit vs credit — what fits Israel?

Credit card Monthly billing, limit, rewards & cashback
Debit Money leaves your account immediately — maximum control

💳 Credit card

Purchases go to your monthly bill. You get a limit, instalments are possible, and cards often include cashback, points, or travel insurance. If you don’t pay in full — interest applies.

Best when: you pay the full balance every month and want to earn on regular spending.

⚡ Debit (Visa Debit / Mastercard Direct)

Money leaves your account immediately — international debit-style cards common at Hapoalim, Leumi, Discount, and others. Less debt risk, fewer premium perks.

Best when: maximum control, young adults, soldiers, or anyone avoiding credit limits.

In Israel you can hold both — credit for rewards, debit for daily spending. On MyAshrai filter by the debit tag or use Perfect Finder.

Credit rating (BDI) — why it matters for your card

Your credit rating (BDI) is your credit file — banks check it before approving a card, setting your limit, and fees. Check it once a year.

In Israel, agencies like BDI and Credit Data (Netu'ei Ashrai) hold your payment history. Banks and card companies check this before approving a card, setting your limit, and sometimes fees.

  • 📋 How to check? — Once a year free at BDI’s official site or through your bank. Look for errors on your file.
  • What helps? — On-time payments, fewer new card applications, sensible use of your limit.
  • ⚠️ What hurts? — Late payments, enforcement proceedings, many credit applications in a short time.
  • 🏦 And your card? — A lower score doesn’t always mean no card — but maybe a lower limit. Issuers (MAX, Cal) can be more flexible than a single bank.

What is BDI? Israel’s credit bureau file — a record of your loans, cards, and payment history that banks and card issuers check before approving credit. You can check yours (once a year, free) at BDI’s official site. MyAshrai does not check your BDI — it helps you compare after you know you’re eligible. For approval, contact the bank or issuer.

How to pick the right card

  • 🎯 Match your spending — Grocery cashback? Travel points? Don’t pay for perks you won’t use.
  • 🏦 Eligibility — Bank cards usually need an account; MAX / Cal / Isracard are often open to everyone.
  • 💰 Transparent fees — Monthly fee, FX fee, ATM fee. Think net benefit, not just “1% cashback”.
  • ⚔️ Bank vs card company — Sometimes the same benefit is cheaper through a card company; sometimes through your bank.

Instead of another long article — try Perfect Finder (5 questions, answer in ₪).

Tips to maximize — without falling into traps

✅ Good habits

  • Pay the full balance each month — interest stays at 0.
  • Pick a card that fits your real spending pattern.
  • Use perks you actually need (groceries, delivery, fuel).
  • Set alerts or spending limits in the app.
  • Compare FX fees if you shop abroad.

🌿 Gentle reminders

  • A credit card is a short-term loan — convenient, not free money.
  • Minimum payments feel easy — interest adds up over time.
  • A high limit ≠ high income. It means the issuer is willing to lend to you.

Risks, debt & psychology — handled with care

Nobody is born knowing how debit interest works. Many people learn after a mistake — and that’s okay. Credit cards are designed to feel easy: tap, instant approval, “pay next month”. That can create buy now, pay later — even when there isn’t enough money in the account.

Why does this happen?

  • Time gap — The pain of paying comes weeks later; buying feels instant and good.
  • Available credit — The brain treats unused limit like “money” that isn’t yours yet.
  • Interest — If you don’t pay in full, the issuer earns. That’s the business model — worth knowing.
  • Installments & BNPL — Easy to buy, harder to stop once it becomes a habit.

No judgment here — just awareness. If a card pulls you to overspend, that’s a signal to pause: budget, cash for small purchases, or professional advice. MyAshrai helps you pick a good card; spending choices remain yours, with respect.

Ready to choose wisely?

You’ve read the guide — now let the numbers work. MyAshrai: personal match, ROI calculator, full comparison.