India credit card spends hit ₹2,023 billion in May, 1 million new cards added
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Credit card spending in India climbed to ₹2,023 billion in May 2025, rising 6.6 per cent year-on-year and 2.6 per cent month-on-month, according to a report by Asit C. Mehta Investment Intermediates Limited released on Friday, 26 June. The sequential uptick follows a sharp 10.1 per cent month-on-month decline in April, suggesting the recovery remains tentative rather than structurally entrenched.
Card Issuance at a 27-Month High
The industry added 1 million new credit cards in May — the second-highest monthly issuance in the past 27 months. Total cards in force rose to 120.5 million, with year-on-year growth accelerating to 8.7 per cent, the highest rate recorded in the past 15 months. The surge in card additions signals that lenders are actively expanding their customer base even as per-card spending metrics show signs of moderation.
Transaction Volumes and Spend Trends
Transaction volumes reached 587 million in May, up 5.7 per cent sequentially and 25.8 per cent on an annual basis. However, the sequential rebound is partly a mechanical recovery from April's steep decline rather than fresh organic demand, the report cautioned.
Average spend per card eased 1.8 per cent year-on-year but edged up 1.7 per cent month-on-month. SBI stood out as a clear outlier, posting per-card spend growth of 12 per cent year-on-year, driven by higher corporate card usage. Average spend per transaction continued its downward trajectory, falling 3 per cent month-on-month and 15 per cent year-on-year, a trend the report attributed to a rising share of low-value transactions.
Market Share Dynamics Among Top Banks
The top four banks — collectively holding roughly 76 per cent of industry spending market share — accounted for only 63.7 per cent of incremental spending during May, indicating that smaller players are gaining ground at the margin. Among the top four, most broadly matched industry sequential growth; HDFC Bank was the exception, growing at a more modest 4.2 per cent sequentially.
Broader Credit Growth Picks Up Pace
A separate report noted that credit sourcing of new loans in Q3 FY26 grew 36 per cent year-on-year, a sharp acceleration from the 7 per cent recorded a year earlier. The report pointed to sustained demand from both consumers and businesses, alongside rising secured lending and improving asset quality as key drivers of the upturn.
With card issuance near multi-year highs and credit sourcing accelerating, the trajectory of consumer credit in India will be closely watched in the months ahead — particularly to see whether May's spending recovery holds through the festive quarter.