Credit Card Numbers and What They
Mean
Have you ever really looked at your
credit card and tried to figure out what that huge string
of numbers really means? Do these card issuers have so many
customers that your account number has to be 16 digits
long?
You may be surprised to know that all those numbers you see
actually do stand for something, and it's not just who YOU are.
Let's take a look.
Most of the major credit card companies operate on the same
system when choosing a credit card number. Other cards
like gas cards, department store cards and phone cards go their
own way. Let's concentrate on the ones that all play by the
same rules.
The very first digit in the series will be a 3,4,5, 0r 6.
This number designates the type of card as follows:
3 = a Travel & Entertainment Card like American Express
or Diners Club.
4 = Visa and Visa-branded debit cards, cash cards, etc.
5 = MasterCard and MasterCard-branded debit cards, cash
cards, etc.
6 = Discover
American Express and Diners Club use the second digit to
identify the company. That means that Diners Club cards will
start with either "36" or "38", and American Express cards will
use either "34" or "37".
The remaining numbers in the series are used for different
purposes depending upon the card type and issuer.
In most cases, the next group after the opening series of
numbers represents the routing number of the card-issuing bank,
the group after that is the user's account number, and the
final digit is a check digit. The check digit is a number that
is calculated by applying a special formula to all of the other
numbers. The check digit is the result of that formula and is
used as an anti-fraud check.
To keep things from getting too confusing, look at your card
as you follow along for the next steps.
American Express
The American Express Card uses digits three and four for
type (business or personal) and the currency of the
cardholder's country of origin. The next digits from the
fifth through the eleventh are account numbers. Digits
twelve through fourteen indicate the card number within the
account and the last digit is the check digit.
Visa
With Visa, digits two through six represent the bank
number. Beginning with the seventh digit and running
through the twelfth or the fifteenth represents the account
number and the last number is the check digit. Since all
Visa cards do not have the same amount of numbers in the
sequence, the number of digits in a group may vary.
MasterCard
For MasterCard, the second digit, through to anywhere
between the third and the sixth digit is the bank number.
All remaining digits, except the check digit at the end of the
series, identifies that cardholder's account.
Now that we've gone over it all, you're probably wondering
why you were ever wondering in the first place. Just
remember though, knowledge is power. Some things are just
fun to know.
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