The Citi Custom Cash card is no longer accepting new applicants as of May 28, 2026, and honestly, this one stings a little. For five years, this card was the rare no-annual-fee product that actually felt smart to carry. But its closure isn’t happening in a vacuum: it reflects a broader shift in how credit card issuers are rethinking their product lineups heading into the second half of the decade. If you’re an existing cardholder, a would-be applicant who missed the window, or just someone trying to figure out where cash-back cards are headed, here’s what you need to know.
Why Citi Pulled the Plug on Its Most Creative Cash-Back Card
Citi confirmed the closure with a fairly corporate statement about “managing and evolving its product portfolio.” Translation: the card either wasn’t profitable enough, didn’t attract the customer segments Citi wanted, or both.
Here’s the thing: the Custom Cash card launched in June 2021, right when consumer spending patterns were wildly unpredictable due to the pandemic. Its core promise was clever: you didn’t have to think about categories. The card automatically identified your highest spending category each billing cycle and applied 5% cash back to it, up to $500 in purchases. Everything else earned 1%.
That $500 cap per billing cycle was the card’s Achilles’ heel. While competitors like the Chase Freedom Flex and Discover it Cash Back impose quarterly caps (typically $1,500 per quarter), the Custom Cash’s monthly ceiling meant your maximum bonus earnings topped out at $25 per month, or $300 per year. For heavy spenders in any single category, that math got frustrating fast.
What Made This Card Special (And Why People Are Upset)
The automatic category detection was genuinely unique. Most 5% cash-back cards require you to:
- Check which categories are active each quarter
- Manually activate those categories before spending
- Track your spending to avoid exceeding the cap
- Repeat every three months
The Custom Cash skipped all of that. You just used the card, and Citi figured out the rest. The eligible categories were also broader than what rotating-category cards typically offer:
| Category | Typical Quarterly Card | Citi Custom Cash |
|---|---|---|
| Grocery stores | Sometimes (1-2 quarters/year) | Always eligible |
| Restaurants | Sometimes | Always eligible |
| Gas stations | Sometimes | Always eligible |
| Streaming services | Rarely | Always eligible |
| Drugstores | Rarely | Always eligible |
| Home improvement stores | Sometimes | Always eligible |
| Fitness clubs | Almost never | Always eligible |
| Select travel | Sometimes | Always eligible |
| Select transit | Rarely | Always eligible |
| Live entertainment | Almost never | Always eligible |
That consistency mattered. You could build your spending strategy around this card and know it would deliver 5% on groceries every single month, not just during Q1.
The 2026 Cash-Back Card Landscape Looks Very Different
The Citi Custom Cash closing to new applications isn’t an isolated event. Credit card issuers across the board are recalibrating their rewards programs in 2026, and several trends explain why:
- Interchange fee pressure: Proposed regulations and merchant lawsuits continue to squeeze the transaction fees that fund rewards programs. Cards offering 5% back on a 2-3% interchange margin were always a loss leader.
- Portfolio consolidation: Issuers are trimming overlapping products. Citi still offers the Double Cash card (2% flat on everything), and maintaining two cash-back products with different structures likely created internal competition for the same customers.
- Shift toward premium products: The real money for issuers is in annual-fee cards with higher spending thresholds. Free cards that attract moderate spenders aren’t the priority they were five years ago.
- Rising delinquency rates: With consumer credit card debt climbing through 2025 and into 2026, issuers are being pickier about which products they keep open and who they extend credit to.
Are You an Existing Cardholder? Here’s Your Playbook
If you already have a Custom Cash card, relax. Citi has confirmed that existing cardholders keep their accounts, benefits, and rewards structure. Nothing changes for you right now.
But “right now” is doing some heavy lifting in that sentence. Here’s what to watch for:
- Benefit downgrades: Issuers frequently reduce perks on closed-to-new-applicants cards over time. Keep an eye on any notices from Citi about changes to your rewards rate or category list.
- Product migration offers: Citi may eventually offer to convert your Custom Cash into a different product, likely the Double Cash. This isn’t necessarily bad, but you’d lose the 5% category bonus.
- Credit score implications: If Citi ever decides to close the card entirely (not announced, but possible down the road), losing that credit line could affect your utilization ratio. Consider requesting a credit limit increase now while the product is still active.
A Quick Math Check on Your Annual Value
Take 15 minutes this week to calculate what your Custom Cash card is actually earning you. Here’s the formula:
Monthly bonus earnings = (Your top category spend, up to $500) × 5% = up to $25/month
Monthly base earnings = (All other spending) × 1%
Annual bonus ceiling = $25 × 12 = $300
If you’re consistently hitting that $500 cap each month, you’re getting solid value from a free card. If your top category spend is more like $200-300 per month, your actual bonus is $10-15 monthly, and you might do just as well with a flat 2% card on all spending.
What Should You Get Instead? Honest Alternatives for 2026
If you were planning to apply for the Custom Cash and missed your chance, here are the realistic alternatives, each with trade-offs:
| Card | Rewards Structure | Annual Fee | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Citi Double Cash | 2% flat (1% on purchase + 1% on payment) | $0 | Simplicity, no category tracking |
| Chase Freedom Flex | 5% on rotating quarterly categories (up to $1,500/quarter) | $0 | Higher quarterly caps, broader ecosystem |
| Discover it Cash Back | 5% on rotating quarterly categories (up to $1,500/quarter) | $0 | First-year match doubles all rewards |
| Bank of America Customized Cash | 3% on one chosen category, 2% grocery/wholesale | $0 | Preferred Rewards members (up to 5.25%) |
| Wells Fargo Active Cash | 2% flat on everything | $0 | No categories to manage, solid base rate |
The Discover Trick Worth Knowing
If you’re a new Discover customer, their first-year Cashback Match effectively doubles your earnings. That means those 5% quarterly categories become 10%, and even the 1% base rate becomes 2%. On a $20,000 annual spend, that’s potentially $600+ in your first year versus the $300 ceiling on the Custom Cash.
The catch: Discover’s acceptance network is smaller than Visa or Mastercard, though the gap has narrowed significantly by 2026.
Red Flags: When a Card Closure Should Make You Nervous
The Custom Cash situation is straightforward: the card is closed to new applicants, existing accounts continue. But card closures and product changes can sometimes signal bigger issues. Watch for these warning signs across your credit card portfolio:
- Multiple cards from the same issuer closing in a short window: Could indicate the issuer is pulling back from consumer lending
- Sudden reduction in credit limits you didn’t request: Sometimes precedes account closures
- Rewards devaluation without a clear replacement benefit: The issuer may be squeezing existing cardholders to improve margins
- Emails about “exciting changes to your account”: In credit card language, “exciting” almost never means better for you
None of these apply to the Custom Cash situation specifically, but they’re worth keeping on your radar as issuers continue restructuring their portfolios through 2026.
How the Citi Ecosystem Works Now (Post-Custom Cash)
With the Custom Cash no longer available to new applicants, Citi’s consumer card lineup has a noticeable gap. Here’s what remains:
- Citi Double Cash: The 2% flat-rate workhorse. Still one of the best no-fee cards available.
- Citi Strata Premier: The annual-fee travel card earning ThankYou Points with transfer partner access.
- Citi-branded co-branded cards: Costco Anywhere Visa, various airline and retail partnerships.
The interesting wrinkle: both the Custom Cash and Double Cash earn ThankYou Points, which can transfer to airline and hotel partners when paired with a Strata Premier card. If you hold the Custom Cash and Strata Premier together, you’ve got a combination that’s no longer replicable for new customers. That makes your existing Custom Cash account more valuable than you might realize.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I still apply for the Citi Custom Cash card anywhere?
No. As of May 28, 2026, the card is officially closed to all new applications. You won’t find a working application link through Citi’s website, third-party comparison sites, or pre-approval tools. If you see a site still advertising applications, the link will either redirect or return an error. This closure applies to all new applicants without exception.
Will my existing Citi Custom Cash account be shut down?
Not based on anything Citi has announced. Existing cardholders retain their accounts, credit lines, and rewards structure. However, issuers can modify terms with notice, so it’s smart to read any correspondence from Citi carefully over the next 12-18 months. If they do decide to sunset the product entirely, they’d be required to give you advance notice.
What happens to my ThankYou Points if the card eventually closes?
ThankYou Points earned through the Custom Cash don’t disappear if the card closes, as long as you have another ThankYou Points-earning Citi card. If the Custom Cash is your only Citi card, your points could expire. The safest move is to either maintain the Double Cash alongside it or redeem your points balance before any potential closure.
Is there a direct replacement card Citi is offering?
Citi hasn’t announced a specific replacement product. The closest existing option in their lineup is the Double Cash, which earns a flat 2% on everything but lacks the 5% category bonus. It’s possible Citi will launch a new cash-back product later in 2026 or 2027, but nothing has been confirmed. For now, the alternatives listed above from other issuers are your best options if you want that 5% category earning potential.
Your Next Move Matters More Than This Card
Losing access to one card isn’t a financial emergency. But it’s a good prompt to audit your wallet. Are your current cards actually aligned with where your money goes each month? Pull up your last three statements, identify your top spending categories, and check whether your rewards are keeping up. A 15-minute review could easily surface $200-400 in annual rewards you’re leaving on the table, and that’s worth more than any single card closure should cost you. If your situation is complex or you’re carrying balances alongside rewards cards, a conversation with a financial advisor can help you sort out priorities.
