·
Consumers monitoring their CIBIL Score for the first time grew by 27%
year-over-year (YoY) as of December 2025
·
The average CIBIL Score of monitoring consumers rose to 728, with 45% of
those improving their CIBIL Score within six months of monitoring
·
Millennial and Gen Z consumers, women, and non-metro regions lead the
way in credit landscape transformation, with their careful planning and preference
for secured credit options such as gold loans and two-wheeler loans
Mumbai : India is entering a new phase of active and informed
credit ownership as credit monitoring becomes increasingly embedded in everyday
financial behaviour. What was once largely a reactive, one-time, loan-related
activity is now evolving into a regular consumer-led practice and a core part
of financial hygiene, according to TransUnion CIBIL’s latest report, CIBIL for Every Indian – Uncovering How India Owned Its Credit Journey in
2025. The report highlights a fundamental shift in India’s credit behaviour
from passive awareness to active ownership. Credit monitoring is no longer
merely an enabler for borrowing; it has become a tool for self-awareness,
discipline, and empowerment.
As of December 2025, the number of Indians who had self-monitored their
CIBIL Score rose to 183 million across age groups, following a 27% year-over-year
(YoY) increase in consumers monitoring their credit for the first time. This
momentum signals a progressively widespread adoption of credit awareness as a
core financial habit.
The impact of consumers regularly self-monitoring their CIBIL Score is
evident in outcomes. Nearly 45% of monitoring consumers improved their credit score
within six months of monitoring. The average CIBIL Score among monitoring
consumers stood at 728[1],
pointing to a strong alignment between active monitoring and healthier credit
profiles. The transformation of credit monitoring from sporadic activity to
financial habit has led to enhanced financial outcomes for consumers, with
younger borrowers such as Millennials and Gen Z[2],
women, and non-metro regions leading the movement.
Mr. Bhavesh Jain, MD and CEO, TransUnion CIBIL, said: “Historically, many consumers
interacted with their credit profile only when they needed a product such as a
personal loan or a credit card. Today, monitoring is not related merely to a
single transaction but is embraced as ongoing financial hygiene. Consumer focus
has shifted from a transactional approach towards an asset to build a strong,
sustainable credit profile. In effect, India is moving from simply taking
credit to truly taking charge. Monitoring is the behaviour that anchors this
change, turning the CIBIL Score from a static number into a live indicator of
financial health that consumers actively track and improve.”
Non-Metro Regions: India’s Growth
Frontier
India’s credit awareness movement is now increasingly shaped by non-metro
regions. As of December 2025, around 75% of all monitoring consumers were from
non-metro locations, representing a 28% YoY growth in this segment. The trend
of rapidly expanding credit awareness beyond major urban centres extends to
first-time borrowers, with 78% of New-to-Credit consumers coming from these
markets. Non-metros also lead in credit quality, with 73% of prime score (731+)
consumers also residing there.
This combination of high participation and strong credit profiles
positions non-metros as a key driver in India’s evolving credit landscape. With
access barriers diminishing, awareness is becoming a more equitable force for
financial opportunity. Non-metros are not just participating; they are leading
in both the number of monitoring consumers and the quality of credit profiles.
Gen Z: India’s First Credit-Native Generation
Unlike previous generations who often encountered credit scores later in
life, younger borrowers such as Millennials and Gen Z are engaging with
financial tools at the outset of their financial journeys. These younger
borrowers together account for 77% of all monitoring consumers, reflecting a generation
that is more comfortable with data, digital journeys, and self-service tools.
Gen Z is emerging as India’s first truly credit-native generation,
demonstrating an inherent understanding and proactive engagement with their
financial profiles. Their 1.41x growth in credit monitoring activity
significantly outpaced other demographics. As of December 2025, Gen Z consumers
constituted 29% of the total monitoring base. This early adoption suggests a
generation that is not just experimenting with credit but actively seeking to
understand and manage it responsibly from the start.
Gen Z consumers’ proactive monitoring habits are translating into
distinct shifts in their borrowing patterns. Post-monitoring, this generation
exhibits a strategic approach to credit products. Among self-monitoring Gen Z
consumers, gold loan originations rose by 61% YoY, while two-wheeler loans by
them in semi-urban and rural areas saw a 23% YoY rise.
This generation is setting a new standard for credit engagement,
demonstrating that early awareness coupled with strategic product choices can
lead to a more responsible and empowered financial future.
Women: India’s New
Credit Vanguard
Women are driving significant shifts in India’s financial landscape. As
of December 2025, their engagement with credit monitoring grew at an
accelerated pace with a 38% YoY growth in women monitoring their credit scores,
compared to a 25% YoY increase among men.
Women now form 21% of all monitoring consumers, up from 19% previously. The
growth is particularly strong in non-metro regions which account for 71% of
newly self-monitoring women consumers. A substantial 63% of monitoring women
maintain a Prime score (731+), underscoring their strong credit health and
responsible financial behaviour. These figures collectively position women as a
powerful and growing force in India’s credit evolution.
Women are not just accessing credit; their post-monitoring approach
shows how their borrowing patterns align with their financial goals and
demonstrates a sophisticated understanding of different credit instruments.
Gold loan originations grew by 38% among self-monitoring women, signalling a
strong preference for secured, flexible credit.
These encouraging trends not only serve women’s individual financial
well-being, they are also collectively shaping a more inclusive, robust, and
mature credit future for India.
Credit Monitoring as a Movement
Credit monitoring sets off a simple loop of awareness
resulting in action followed by visible advantage. Monitoring doesn’t just reflect
behaviour; it helps reshape it.
Trends seen among self-monitoring Indians confirm the
popularity of gold loans, and their move from being an emergency fallback to becoming
a mainstream credit lever. Gold loan originations grew by 25% within three
months of monitoring, with a 2x rise in disbursal to Gen Z consumers, and a 26%
growth in gold loans to consumers in semi-urban and rural areas.
Similarly, two-wheeler loan originations saw 6% YoY
growth within three months of monitoring, including a 23% rise among Gen Z
borrowers in smaller towns. Among monitoring consumers, 17% opened a
consumption loan within three months of monitoring.
At the heart of this shift is a deeper change in how Indian consumers
are engaging with credit. Monitoring is giving them greater visibility into
their financial standing and helping them engage with formal credit with more
awareness and intent. As this behaviour becomes more widespread, the millions
of small, informed decisions along with cumulative and consistent action are adding
up over time to shape a more resilient, inclusive, and mature credit ecosystem
in India.
Mr. Jain said, “Credit monitoring is now firmly a mass
behaviour. Millions of Indians routinely check their CIBIL Score and Report. This
practice is no longer confined to affluent urban centres. Non-metro India is
redefining the contours of inclusion, leading both credit adoption and quality.
“Gen Z and Millennials, India’s first credit-native
generations, are engaging with credit data early and systematically, and women
are stepping into more visible and informed roles in borrowing and credit
management. Together, these segments are driving this new credit culture and anchoring
a more disciplined, data-driven approach to credit,” he added.
“At TransUnion CIBIL, we are proud of the part we play
in ensuring responsible access to credit for every eligible consumer and
business. India has seen a quiet but decisive shift in credit behaviour over
the last few years towards active, informed credit management. We will continue
to support sustainable credit growth and contribute to deepening financial
inclusion across segments and geographies,” Mr. Jain concluded.