Quick summary: If you have heard that “big credit card rule changes” are happening from July 1, 2026, you are right, but the picture is more specific than most headlines suggest. On July 1, HDFC Bank and SBI Card change lounge access and reward point rules for several popular cards, weekly credit bureau reporting begins for faster credit score updates, and a new RBI disaster relief provision kicks in. The anti-mis-selling protections and the famous 3-day grace period on late fees, however, are coming later: January 2027 and April 2027 respectively. This guide covers everything in one place, in the correct order.
What Is Actually Changing on July 1, 2026?
Three things change specifically on July 1, 2026 for credit card users.
Change 1: HDFC Bank Lounge Access Becomes Spend-Based
HDFC Bank has introduced a spending-based eligibility criterion for complimentary domestic airport lounge access. From July 1, cardholders must spend a minimum of ₹60,000 in the preceding quarter to qualify for complimentary lounge visits, which are now capped at three per calendar quarter.
This affects HDFC Regalia Gold, Diners Club Privilege, and BizPower cardholders. Before this rule, many of these cards offered lounge access as a flat benefit regardless of spending. Now it is conditional.
What else changes for HDFC cards from July 1:
- The base reward rate for HDFC Regalia Gold changes from 4 reward points per ₹150 spent to 5 reward points per ₹200 spent, which is a slight effective devaluation (earlier you got 2.67 points per ₹100; now you get 2.5 points per ₹100).
- The quarterly milestone bonus on HDFC Regalia Gold for reaching ₹2.5 lakh quarterly spend is enhanced: the MakeMyTrip or Reliance Digital gift voucher goes up from ₹2,500 to ₹5,000.
- HDFC Regalia Gold cardholders also gain access to a new “Boarding Edge Programme” from July 1: upload your airline boarding pass on the SmartBuy portal and choose two of several travel perks (dining vouchers, lounge access, flight upgrades) every quarter.
- Dynamic currency conversion markup on international transactions increases to 1.75% for Regalia Gold and Diners Club Privilege.
Bottom line for HDFC cardholders: If you travel and rely on lounge access, you now need to spend ₹60,000 per quarter on your card to earn it. If your quarterly spend is lower, you have lost a benefit. Budget your card spend accordingly or consider whether this card still makes sense for your usage pattern.
Change 2: SBI Card Reward Points Caps and Exclusions
SBI Card has updated the guidelines for reward points earned on the PhonePe SBI Card Purple and PhonePe SBI Card Select Black, effective from July 1, 2026. A maximum monthly limit has been established for reward points on these cards, with separate caps for insurance and other expenses.
Select Black cardholders will no longer earn reward points on specific transactions such as toll payments, gift card purchases, jewellery acquisitions, education-related payments, certain utility bills, insurance payments, and some UPI transactions outside the PhonePe platform.
There is also a broader cap: SBI Card’s general monthly redemption ceiling is 60,000 points across several cards. High spenders who used to earn and redeem freely will find this constraining.
What this means in practice: If you hold a PhonePe SBI Card and used to earn points on insurance premium payments, toll recharges via FASTag, or jewellery purchases, those categories go dark from July 1. Route those payments to a different card, or accept the points loss.
Change 3: Weekly Credit Bureau Reporting Begins
The RBI has moved from monthly to 15-day credit reporting from January 1, 2025. Now it has issued draft rules that push the system further: by July 1, 2026, banks and NBFCs will have to update your credit data with bureaus every week.
In practical terms, this means your CIBIL, Experian, or CRIF report will refresh far more often than before. This is largely good news for borrowers:
- A credit card payment you make this week appears in your score within days, not weeks.
- New loans or credit cards opened show up quickly, allowing faster access to credit-based decisions.
- If an account that had defaulted gets regularised (paid up), the improvement in your score happens within the week rather than waiting for end-of-month cycles.
The flip side: if an account slips into stress or asset classification changes, that negative change is also visible to lenders much faster. There is no room for a bad month going unnoticed. Paying on time, every time, is now more important than ever.
Change 4: Disaster Relief Without Waiting for Application
A provision from the RBI credit card amendment directions takes effect on July 1, 2026: banks will now be able to provide relief to customers affected by natural disasters on their own initiative, without waiting for customers to apply.
If you are in a disaster-affected region and your bank identifies you as a potentially impacted cardholder (based on your registered address or billing location), they can proactively restructure your dues, waive late fees, or offer a moratorium without you having to call in and request it. This is a meaningful quality-of-life change for customers in crisis situations.
What Is NOT Changing on July 1 (Despite What You May Have Read)
Two changes are being widely misreported as July 1, 2026 events. They are real, but the dates are different.
The Anti-Mis-Selling Framework: January 1, 2027
The rule that stops banks from bundling insurance, credit cards, or investment products with a single-click “I Agree” button was drafted earlier in 2026 and many news reports said it would take effect July 1. This is incorrect.
The final RBI Responsible Business Conduct (Second Amendment) Directions were released on June 15, 2026, and the new norms will come into effect from January 1, 2027.
Here is what this framework will deliver when it does arrive:
- Banks cannot push insurance, credit cards, or investment schemes on customers unless they have clearly agreed to buy them. Explicit customer consent is required for every product separately.
- Banks must eliminate “dark patterns” in their digital apps and websites: countdown timers creating false urgency, pre-selected add-on products, hidden cancellation options, and confusing consent language are all prohibited.
- In cases where mis-selling is established, the bank must refund the entire amount paid by the customer and compensate for any resulting financial loss.
- Marketing calls are restricted to 9 AM to 6 PM. Customers on the Do Not Disturb registry cannot be contacted at all.
- Banks must follow up within 30 days of selling any financial product and collect feedback to catch mis-selling early.
The effective date is January 1, 2027. If you are currently dealing with a credit card or insurance product you were pushed into without clear consent, you cannot yet invoke this framework for redressal, but you can log the complaint through your bank’s grievance cell or the RBI Ombudsman.
The 3-Day Grace Period on Late Fees: April 1, 2027
This is the rule that has generated the most excitement among credit card holders, and understandably so: the RBI announced an amendment introducing a 3-day buffer before late fees kick in. If your payment due date is April 5, your bank cannot charge you a late fee until April 8.
The same amendment also changes how late fees are calculated: the fee is calculated on just the outstanding balance, not the full bill amount. This is fairer for people who paid most of their bill but missed a small residue.
However, these new credit card rules will take effect on April 1, 2027, giving banks time to align their systems. Until then, your bank can and will charge late fees immediately after the due date, on whatever amount they specify in their terms.
Critical note: The due date itself is not moving. The three days is only a window before penalties begin. Interest still accrues from your original due date. Paying late is still more expensive than paying on time, even after April 2027.
The Full Timeline of RBI Credit Card Changes
| What Changes | When | Impact |
| HDFC lounge access: spend ₹60,000/quarter for 3 visits | July 1, 2026 | Affects frequent flyers with lower quarterly spend |
| HDFC Regalia Gold: reward rate slightly reduced | July 1, 2026 | Minor effective devaluation |
| SBI PhonePe card: reward point caps and category exclusions | July 1, 2026 | Affects toll, jewellery, insurance spend |
| Weekly credit bureau reporting | July 1, 2026 | Faster score improvement (and faster score damage) |
| RBI disaster relief: banks can act proactively | July 1, 2026 | Benefit for customers in natural disaster zones |
| Anti-mis-selling framework | January 1, 2027 | Explicit consent for every product; refunds for mis-sold products |
| 3-day grace period on late fees | April 1, 2027 | No penalty for 3 days after due date; fee on outstanding balance only |
What You Should Do Right Now
If you hold an HDFC Regalia Gold or Diners Club Privilege card:
Check your last three months of spend on the HDFC Bank app. If you are consistently below ₹60,000 per quarter, you will lose complimentary lounge access from July 1. Decide whether to concentrate your spend on this card to meet the threshold, or carry a separate card for lounge access.
If you hold a PhonePe SBI Card Purple or Select Black:
Review the updated exclusion list and identify categories where you currently earn points that will no longer earn from July 1. Route those transactions to a different card before the rule kicks in.
If you are trying to improve your credit score:
The move to weekly credit reporting makes consistent on-time payments more impactful than ever. Pay every credit card bill fully and on time. Any improvement in your repayment behaviour now reflects in your score within days. If you have recently closed an overdue account, expect the positive update sooner than before.
If you were mis-sold a credit card or insurance product by your bank:
You cannot yet invoke the January 2027 framework, but you can raise a formal complaint with your bank’s grievance redressal mechanism and escalate to the RBI Ombudsman at rbi.org.in if unresolved within 30 days. Document everything.
If you want to avoid the credit card trap entirely:
A credit line on UPI, which lets you borrow small amounts directly through your UPI app at the point of payment, is an increasingly popular alternative for short-term, small-ticket credit. See our guide on what is a credit line on UPI for a comparison. For larger spending needs, comparing card terms carefully before applying remains essential. Our guide to best money apps in India covers apps that help you track and manage credit card spending effectively.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Is HDFC Bank cutting lounge access completely from July 1?
No. Lounge access continues, but it is now conditional on spending at least ₹60,000 in the preceding calendar quarter. Cardholders who meet this threshold get 3 complimentary domestic lounge visits in the following quarter. If you spent ₹60,000 or more in April to June 2026, you are eligible from July 1. If not, you will not get free lounge access until you meet the threshold in a subsequent quarter.
2. Does the 3-day grace period on late fees start from July 1, 2026?
No. This is the most widely misunderstood change. The 3-day grace period rule is part of the RBI Credit Card Amendment Directions and takes effect on April 1, 2027. Until then, your bank can charge late fees as soon as the due date passes. The only July 1 credit card amendment provision is the disaster relief clause.
3. Will the anti-mis-selling rules help me get a refund on an unwanted insurance product my bank pushed on me?
Once the rules take effect on January 1, 2027, yes: if mis-selling is established, your bank is required to refund the full amount and compensate you for losses. Before January 2027, you can still raise a complaint through your bank’s grievance mechanism or the RBI Ombudsman, but the specific refund mandate does not exist yet.
4. How will weekly credit reporting affect someone paying EMIs?
Positively, if you pay on time. Each on-time EMI will be reflected in your credit report within the week, instead of waiting up to 30 days. For loan applications or credit card upgrades, a lender checking your score will see a more current picture of your repayment behaviour. Conversely, a missed EMI will also show up much faster.
5. I do not hold an HDFC or SBI Card. Are any credit card rules changing for me from July 1?
The weekly credit reporting change affects all credit cards across all banks. The disaster relief provision also applies broadly. For specific card benefit changes at other banks (ICICI, Axis, Kotak, etc.), check your card issuer’s communications as individual banks have been rolling out their own policy revisions through 2026 independently of RBI mandates.
6. Are these reward point reductions by HDFC and SBI linked to RBI regulations?
Not directly. Individual banks have been reducing or restructuring reward programmes throughout 2026 as a cost management measure, driven by the rising cost of operating premium benefits. Industry experts say the overhaul reflects a broader recalibration by banks to balance customer acquisition with profitability, marking a shift from benefit-led cards to behaviour-led products. This is an industry trend, not an RBI mandate.
Sources: Business Standard: RBI tightens norms on bundled products, lenders to refund for mis-selling, June 15, 2026; Rupeeq: Recent 2026 RBI rules on credit card late payment fees, May 2026; Business Today: Credit card rewards reset, HDFC, SBI, Axis cut perks, April 2026; Zee Business: 7 financial changes from July 1, June 29, 2026; CAalley: Your credit report goes weekly, June 2026.
This article is for general information only. Verify specific card benefit changes with your card issuer before July 1.