Google has officially launched its first-ever credit card in India, marking a significant step in the digital financial landscape of the country. This new product, named Flex by Google Pay — issued in partnership with Axis Bank — operates on India’s RuPay network and integrates seamlessly with the Unified Payments Interface (UPI). It stands as one of the first global credit card offerings launched first in India, reflecting the growing importance of the Indian digital finance market.
Unlike traditional credit cards where a physical card or external payments device is required, the Flex credit card is entirely digital and integrated within the Google Pay app, allowing users to apply, receive approval, and manage transactions directly on their smartphones without any paperwork.
The Flex credit card is uniquely designed to combine credit capabilities with UPI convenience. This means users can make payments by scanning QR codes at millions of merchants — online and offline — through the RuPay network. This integration streamlines credit usage and brings it closer to everyday UPI payments.
One of the biggest advantages of this offering is its paperless and frictionless onboarding process. Users can apply for the card within minutes within the Google Pay app at zero cost, eliminating physical forms or bank visits.
All aspects of the card are controlled within the Google Pay interface:
Users earn instant rewards — called “Stars” — for each eligible transaction. Stars are redeemable immediately for future transactions, with 1 Star typically equalling ₹1. Users also have the choice to pay their credit card bill in full or convert balances into EMIs directly within the app.
Since the card operates on the RuPay network, it is accepted across extensive merchant points where RuPay credit cards are enabled — bolstering financial inclusivity.
India’s digital payments ecosystem has witnessed exponential growth, primarily driven by UPI — which processes billions of transactions monthly. However, credit access remains limited, with relatively few consumers holding credit cards compared to debit or UPI accounts. The introduction of a fully digital, UPI-integrated credit card by Google Pay in partnership with Axis Bank could significantly broaden credit accessibility — especially for young users, first-time credit holders, and people in smaller towns and cities.
By launching this digital credit card on the RuPay network, Google also endorses India’s payment infrastructure independence — reducing reliance on global card networks like Visa and Mastercard. RuPay’s wide acceptance and lower transaction costs make it an attractive platform for such innovations, with the government and National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) actively promoting domestic card usage.
Traditional credit cards often require separate usage habits and bank interactions. The Flex card bridges this gap by making credit as easy to use as a UPI debit payment, enabling consumers to use credit almost instinctively through familiar QR scans or in-app checkout flows. This convergence could change how everyday credit is used in India and help expand financial inclusion and digital payment literacy.
India’s digital payment revolution began in earnest with the introduction of Aadhaar and mobile banking, but it accelerated rapidly following the launch of Unified Payments Interface (UPI) in 2016. UPI — an instant real-time payment system — enabled seamless money transfers and QR-based payments without needing bank details.
Over time, UPI became embedded in everyday transactions across socioeconomic sections, even in rural markets. However, UPI primarily facilitated debit and bank account-linked transactions, leaving a gap in credit adoption within the digital payments framework.
The RuPay network, launched in 2012 by the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI), aimed to reduce dependence on international card schemes and boost domestic payment infrastructure. Over the years, multiple banks and fintech players have introduced RuPay credit cards linked with UPI payments, strengthening the ecosystem.
Google Pay’s entry into this space through a UPI-linked credit card reflects both the maturation of India’s fintech sector and rising competition among payment platforms to integrate credit into everyday financial habits.
Young users, first-time credit holders, and users from smaller towns and cities can benefit from easy access to credit.
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