A supplementary cardholder is an additional person allowed to use a primary card account.
Supplementary cardholder means an additional person who is allowed to use a primary card account. In Canadian card language, this is a common way to describe an extra card user added to the account held by the main borrower.
Supplementary cardholder matters because people often confuse access with legal responsibility. A person may be able to use the card without being the primary borrower or the main party contractually responsible for the whole account.
It also matters because spending by the supplementary user still affects the shared account balance, credit limit usage, and billing obligations that sit with the main account structure.
In Canada, the primary cardholder usually controls the account and remains central to the repayment obligation, while the supplementary cardholder receives spending access through an additional card. The exact rights and responsibilities can vary by issuer, which is why the card agreement matters.
This term is also one place where a small Canada-versus-U.S. note helps. U.S. content often uses “authorized user” for a closely related idea. In Canadian card language, “supplementary cardholder” is a more common label.
A parent adds an adult child as a supplementary cardholder on an existing account. The child can use the extra card for approved spending, but the main account still belongs to the primary cardholder and the balance must still be managed within that account’s rules.
Supplementary cardholder is not the same as Joint Card Account. A joint account usually involves shared borrower responsibility at the account level rather than simple extra-user access.
It is also not the same as a Co-Signer. A co-signer supports a borrowing obligation through a different approval structure.