Sunday, August 17, 2025, 10:31AM | 
MENU
Advertisement
1
MORE

Digits on your credit card aren't just random numbers

Associated Press

Digits on your credit card aren't just random numbers

Ever wonder what the numbers on your credit cards mean?

They aren’t just a random string of digits. Similar to the vehicle identification number on a car, credit card numbers identify certain things about the account.

A code of sorts embedded in the typical 16-digit card number determines where to send the request for payment on a transaction. It’s something the system needs to get right — or risk embarrassing the card holder with an unjustified rejection.

Advertisement

Validating electronic transactions and keeping them all straight is important considering consumers generated some $4.8 trillion worth of electronic payments in 2013.

A customer checks out at a wholesale club in Camp Hill, Dauphin County. Stores around the coun­try are gear­ing up for the next gen­er­a­tion of credit cards, and con­sum­ers can ex­pect to see changes in check­out aisles and in their wal­lets in com­ing months.
Joan Verdon/The Record (Hackensack, N.J.)
Americans will soon see a new patch of technology on their familiar charge cards

Start with the first digit. It, and in some cases the second digit, identifies the card network that will carry the transaction. All MasterCards start with a “5,” for example. Visa cards start with a “4.” Discover cards get a “6.”

American Express cards start with “34” or “37,” while the number “7” is reserved for gasoline cards issued by petroleum companies such as Exxon and Mobil.

The next four or five numbers in the series identify which of the some 13,000 financial institutions in the U.S. issued the card, such as Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase or Citibank.

Advertisement

When consumers swipe their cards, a terminal reads the magnetic stripe that stores the complete card number. The transaction first has to be routed through the right network and then to the correct bank for authorization.

“The terminal uses the numbers to figure out where to go,” said Jason Oxman, CEO at the Electronic Transactions Association in Washington, D.C.

Network and financial institution numbers are assigned by the American National Standards Institute, a nonprofit based in Washington, D.C.

The rest of the numbers, up through the last digit, make up the account number specific to the customer holding that card.

Phil Schiller, Apple's senior vice president of worldwide product marketing, speaks on stage in 2013 during the introduction of the new iPhone 5s, which included a fingerprint scanner known as Touch ID.
Rocio Labrador
Biometrics emerge as pass code alternative

Then there’‍s that last number. Generally, the final digit is a randomly selected number known as a “check digit,” Mr. Oxman said. It helps validate the account to ensure against errors in entering the account number.

It also helps to limit fraud, he said.

Debit cards are coded the same way as credit cards, Mr. Oxman said. Although newer than credit cards, debit cards have steadily increased in popularity. The volume of debit and credit transactions is now about even, he said.

And there’s a lot of plastic out there. U.S. consumers carry some 1 billion credit and debit cards in their wallets, he added.

“Without question, [paying electronically] is consumers’ preferred way to pay.”

First Published: July 16, 2014, 3:22 a.m.

RELATED
Will Goodboy of West View pumps gas at the Sunny Daze Shell station in West View. Shell stations will have new fraud protection software that helps identify counterfeit or stolen credit cards at the gas pump.
Patricia Sabatini
Visa software tackles fraud at the gas pump
Beginning in April, Visa will soon offer an anti-fraud service that will track cardholders via mobile banking apps.
Patricia Sabatini
Would you let card companies track your smartphone to fight fraud?
SHOW COMMENTS (0)  
Join the Conversation
Commenting policy | How to Report Abuse
If you would like your comment to be considered for a published letter to the editor, please send it to letters@post-gazette.com. Letters must be under 250 words and may be edited for length and clarity.
Partners
Advertisement
Pittsburgh Steelers (13) Scotty Miller celebrates a first down against Tampa Bay Buccaneers in a preseason football game at Acrisure Stadium on Saturday, Aug 16, 2025.
1
sports
Who's rising and who's falling after the Steelers' 2nd preseason game?
Pittsburgh Steelers (20) Kaleb Johnson runs out of the backfield against Tampa Bay Buccaneers in a preseason football game at Acrisure Stadium on Saturday, Aug 16, 2025.
2
sports
Gerry Dulac: Steelers drop last-second decision to Buccaneers, but preseason progress of key players encouraging
Shredded bark of Tabernanthe iboga plant, which contains ibogaine.
3
news
A former Texas governor has taken it. But is ibogaine really all some tout it to be?
U.S. Steel’s Clairton Coke Works continues to operate, shown here, Tuesday, August 12, 2025, after rescue operations transitioned to the initial phases of reconstruction and investigation late Monday, following a massive explosion.
4
business
2nd man killed in Clairton Coke Works explosion identified
The Pennsylvania Capitol, which lawmakers left Wednesday afternoon and -- even though a state budget is more than six weeks overdue -- are not scheduled to return until September.
5
news
Pa. budget debacle: Taxpayers losing money as state leaders ‘can’t get their act together’
 (Associated Press)
Associated Press
Advertisement
LATEST business
Advertisement
TOP
Email a Story