Credit Card Payoff Calculator
Find out when you will pay off your credit card
Find out how long it will take to pay off your credit card balance and how much interest you will pay. Compare minimum payments vs. fixed payments, and see how extra payments can save you thousands in interest charges.
Quick example: A $6,000 balance at 24.99% APR with a $120 minimum payment takes 9 years and 2 months to pay off, costing $7,186 in interest. Increasing the payment to $250/month cuts payoff time to 2 years and 7 months, saving $5,047 in interest.
The Minimum Payment Trap
If you only paid the minimum ($100/mo), it would take 13y 11mo and you would pay $11,694.38 in interest alone.
At $200.00/mo, you save $9,823.30 in interest and pay off 11 years sooner.
Balance Over Time
| Month | Payment | Principal | Interest | Balance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $200.00 | $104.21 | $95.79 | $4,895.79 |
| 2 | $200.00 | $106.20 | $93.80 | $4,789.59 |
| 3 | $200.00 | $108.24 | $91.76 | $4,681.35 |
| 4 | $200.00 | $110.31 | $89.69 | $4,571.03 |
| 5 | $200.00 | $112.43 | $87.57 | $4,458.61 |
| 6 | $200.00 | $114.58 | $85.42 | $4,344.03 |
| 7 | $200.00 | $116.78 | $83.22 | $4,227.25 |
| 8 | $200.00 | $119.01 | $80.99 | $4,108.24 |
| 9 | $200.00 | $121.29 | $78.71 | $3,986.95 |
| 10 | $200.00 | $123.62 | $76.38 | $3,863.33 |
| 11 | $200.00 | $125.99 | $74.01 | $3,737.34 |
| 12 | $200.00 | $128.40 | $71.60 | $3,608.94 |
| ... 22 more months ... | ||||
| 35 | $71.08 | $69.74 | $1.34 | $0.00 |
What If You Paid More?
Esta calculadora proporciona estimaciones solo con fines informativos. Los resultados reales pueden variar según los términos del prestamista, tarifas y situaciones fiscales. Consulta a un asesor financiero para consejos personalizados.
Credit Card Payoff Calculator
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter your current balance — The total amount owed on the card. Find this on your latest statement or online banking portal.
- Enter the APR (annual percentage rate) — Your card's interest rate. The average credit card APR in 2026 is approximately 24.6%. Check your statement for your specific rate.
- Enter your monthly payment — Either the minimum payment or a fixed amount you plan to pay each month. The calculator shows payoff time and total interest for each scenario.
- Review results — See months to payoff, total interest paid, and total amount paid. Compare different payment strategies side by side.
The Formula Explained
Credit card interest compounds daily but is typically calculated and applied monthly:
Monthly Interest Rate = APR ÷ 12
Monthly Interest Charge = Current Balance × Monthly Rate
Principal Reduction = Monthly Payment − Monthly Interest Charge
Each month, part of your payment goes to interest and the rest reduces your balance. With minimum payments, most goes to interest initially, which is why payoff takes so long.
Payoff Time Formula: N = −log(1 − (Balance × r / Payment)) / log(1 + r), where r = APR/12.
Example: $5,000 at 22% APR, $150/month payment. r = 0.22/12 = 0.01833. N = −log(1 − (5000 × 0.01833 / 150)) / log(1.01833) = 44 months (3 years, 8 months). Total interest paid: $1,581.
Common Scenarios
| Balance | APR | Monthly Payment | Payoff Time | Total Interest |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $2,000 | 22% | $50 | 4 yr 11 mo | $1,161 |
| $2,000 | 22% | $100 | 1 yr 11 mo | $430 |
| $5,000 | 24% | $100 | 8 yr 10 mo | $5,574 |
| $5,000 | 24% | $200 | 2 yr 8 mo | $1,834 |
| $10,000 | 26% | $200 | 10 yr+ | $16,408 |
| $10,000 | 26% | $500 | 2 yr 1 mo | $3,176 |
Important Considerations
- Minimum payments are a trap. Credit card companies set minimums at 1–3% of the balance, which barely covers interest. A $5,000 balance at 24% with minimum payments can take 20+ years to pay off and cost over $8,000 in interest.
- The avalanche method saves the most money. If you have multiple cards, pay minimums on all and put extra money toward the highest-APR card first. This mathematically minimizes total interest paid.
- Balance transfer cards can help. Many cards offer 0% APR for 15–21 months on transferred balances. A 3% transfer fee on $5,000 ($150) is far less than months of 24% interest. Pay off the full balance before the promotional period ends.
- Avoid the minimum payment increase trap. Some issuers increase minimums when you carry a high balance, but the extra money still mostly goes to interest. Always pay a fixed amount above the minimum.
- Stop using the card while paying it off. New purchases add to the balance and undo your payoff progress. Switch to a debit card or cash for daily spending until the balance is zero.
- Check if your rate is variable. Most cards in 2026 have variable rates tied to the prime rate. If the Fed raises rates, your APR goes up automatically, extending your payoff timeline.
Sources
- Average credit card APR: Federal Reserve G.19 Consumer Credit Report, 2026
- Payoff formula: standard amortization calculation (CFPB methodology)
- Minimum payment rules: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB)
Related Calculators
- Compound Interest Calculator — See how interest compounds (works against you on debt)
- Mortgage Calculator — Compare mortgage interest rates to credit card rates
- Investment Growth Calculator — Once debt-free, see how investing those payments grows wealth
- Percentage Calculator — Quick APR and payment percentage math
Preguntas frecuentes
It depends on your balance, APR, and monthly payment. For a $5,000 balance at 22.99% APR: paying $100/month takes about 9 years (costing $5,840 in interest), $200/month takes 32 months ($1,247 interest), and $500/month takes 11 months ($437 interest). The more you pay above the minimum, the faster you get debt-free and the less interest you pay.
Minimum payments are designed to keep you in debt longer, maximizing interest revenue for the card company. A typical minimum payment of 1-2% barely covers the monthly interest charge. On a $5,000 balance at 22.99% APR, the monthly interest alone is about $96. A $100 minimum payment only reduces your principal by $4 that month. This is why it can take decades to pay off.
The average credit card APR in 2026 is approximately 22-24% for new accounts. Cards for excellent credit (740+) may offer 15-18%, while cards for fair credit charge 24-30%. Store credit cards are often 25-30%. If your rate is above 20%, consider a 0% balance transfer offer or personal loan at a lower rate to save on interest.
A balance transfer to a 0% APR card can save hundreds or thousands in interest. Most offers last 12-21 months with a 3-5% transfer fee. The key is paying off the entire balance before the promotional period ends, because the rate then jumps to the regular APR (often 20%+). Only do a transfer if you have a plan to pay it off in time.
Credit card interest is calculated daily on your average daily balance. The daily rate is your APR divided by 365. On a $5,000 balance at 22.99% APR, you pay about $3.15 per day or $95.79 per month in interest. This means if your minimum payment is $100, only $4.21 goes toward reducing your balance. Use this calculator to see your exact interest costs.
Almost always pay off credit cards first. Credit card APRs (20-25%) far exceed savings account returns (4-5% APY). Paying off a card at 22% APR is equivalent to earning a guaranteed 22% return on your money. The only exception: keep a small emergency fund ($1,000-$2,000) before aggressively paying debt, so unexpected expenses do not force you back into credit card debt.
Paying only the minimum means you will stay in debt for years or decades and pay far more in interest than your original balance. On a $5,000 balance at 22.99% APR with $100 minimums, you will pay approximately $10,840 total — more than double the original balance. Credit card statements are now required to show how long minimum-only payments will take.
Mantente actualizado
Recibe nuevas calculadoras y consejos en tu correo.