Credit One Bank® Platinum Visa® Review
Overview
The Credit One Platinum Visa is one of the most heavily advertised cards in America, and a big reason people end up with it is that its branding is deliberately made to look like Capital One. It is not. It is a subprime card that charges a real annual fee for a small, unsecured limit.
It does earn 1% cash back, which sounds fine until you notice the $75-to-$99 annual fee, billed monthly, usually eats that cash back and then some. For rebuilding credit, a no-fee secured card does the same job without bleeding you on fees.
Think twice if: you are about to apply thinking it is Capital One, because it is not, and the fee usually cancels out the rewards.
Our 1.5 out of 5 rating
Each score weighs the rewards rate, value after the annual fee, welcome offer, points flexibility, and perks, with every point valued at a flat 1 cent. This is our editorial assessment to help you compare cards, not a guarantee of approval or of the value you will get.
Rewards: how it earns
You earn 1% cash back on eligible purchases like gas, groceries, and streaming. That is the one redeeming feature, but with a $75-to-$99 annual fee, you would need to spend around $8,000 to $10,000 a year just to break even on the fee, and even then you net nothing. It is rewards theater.
| Category | Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Dining and restaurants | 1x | Base rate |
| Groceries | 1x | Base rate |
| Gas | 1x | Base rate |
| Travel | 1x | Base rate |
| Streaming | 1x | Base rate |
| Everything else | 1x | Everything else |
The fine print on rates: A heavily advertised subprime card whose branding closely mimics Capital One. The 1% cash back is easily wiped out by a $75-to-$99 annual fee (billed monthly), and the APR runs about 25% to 30%. A no-fee secured card is almost always a better way to rebuild.
Every point and mile above is valued at a flat 1 cent, the same honest standard we use for every card. Run your own spending through the calculator to see what this card would actually return for you.
Pros and cons
- Earns 1% cash back, unusual for a subprime card
- Reports to all three credit bureaus
- $75-to-$99 annual fee that usually cancels out the rewards
- Branding deliberately mimics Capital One
- High APR and small limit; a free secured card is better
The welcome bonus
There is no welcome bonus. There is, however, an annual fee waiting for you, which tells you what kind of card this is.
Is the annual fee worth it?
The fee is the whole problem: $75 the first year, then $99, billed at about $8.25 a month, on a card with a high APR and a small limit. You are paying for the privilege of a 1% card that a free secured card beats outright.
Benefits and protections
Beyond the rewards, the perks and protections worth knowing about include:
- $75 annual fee the first year, then $99, billed at about $8.25 per month
- High APR, roughly 25% to 30%
- The annual fee typically cancels out the 1% cash back
- Reports to all three credit bureaus
Statement credits
This card does not come with recurring statement credits. Its value is in the rewards rate and welcome offer.
Who should get it, and who should skip it
If you are rebuilding credit, skip this and get a no-fee secured card instead, the Discover it Secured earns 2% at gas and restaurants and matches your cash back the first year, and the Capital One Platinum Secured has no fee and graduates to unsecured. Both build credit just as well for $0.
The only reason this card has so many holders is aggressive marketing and the Capital One look-alike branding. Do not fall for it.
Frequently asked questions
Best-card guides featuring this card
Offer details verified against issuer sources as of July 2026. Editorial opinions are our own. Cardocrat values all points at a flat 1 cent and never inflates redemptions.