Credit Card Calculator
This credit card calculator is the hub page for turning a revolving card balance into a payoff plan. It answers the question most cardholders need before they choose a strategy: if the balance starts at a known amount, the APR stays unchanged, a fixed payment is made every month, and any new charges are added on the same rhythm, how many months does the debt last and how much interest is paid? The result is the payoff time, total interest, total paid, monthly rate, final payment, and the value of any new charges included in the simulation.
The page is intentionally broader than the credit card payoff calculator, which assumes no new purchases, and different from the credit card interest calculator, which focuses on one billing cycle using a daily periodic rate. It also complements the credit card minimum payment calculator, because the least required payment is rarely the same as the payment that reaches a payoff goal. Use this calculator when you want a single planning view of payoff time, interest cost, and the effect of continuing to charge a predictable amount each month.
Inputs that drive the result
Enter the current unpaid balance you want to retire. This should be the carried balance that will accrue interest, not a purchase you expect to pay in full during a grace period. Enter the annual percentage rate, or APR, as the purchase APR that applies to the balance. The calculator divides this annual rate by 12 to create a monthly rate for the payoff simulation. Enter the monthly payment you can reliably make every month. A payment you make once from a bonus is helpful, but it should not be entered as the monthly amount unless you can keep it up.
The new charges per month field is the differentiator. Set it to zero when you are freezing the card and paying down old debt. Add a dollar amount when you expect recurring charges, subscriptions, or necessary spending to keep landing on the card before each payment. If that field is too high relative to the payment, the calculator may show No payoff, because the payment is not enough to cover the first month’s interest plus the new purchases.
Formula
The calculator uses a monthly periodic rate:
Each month, it computes interest on the balance at the start of that month:
Then it adds interest and new charges, applies the fixed payment, and repeats:
If the fixed payment is less than or equal to the first month’s interest plus new charges, the balance cannot decline under this model. Otherwise, the loop continues until the remaining balance is under half a cent, with the final payment reduced to the amount needed to close the account balance.
Example: estimating credit card repayment
Use the default values: a $2,000 balance, 18% APR, a $100 monthly payment, and $0 of new monthly charges. The monthly rate is:
The first month’s interest is $30.00, so the first payment reduces principal because $100 is greater than the interest and there are no new charges. The calculator then repeats the same monthly process. After 23 full payments, the remaining balance plus final interest is less than the regular payment, so the 24th payment is smaller. The exact output from the compute logic is:
| Result item | Calculator value |
|---|---|
| Payoff time | 2 years |
| Total interest | $395.65 |
| Total paid | $2,395.65 |
| Monthly rate | 1.5% |
| Final payment | $95.65 |
Now change only new charges per month to $40. The first-month interest is still $30, but the payment must now cover $70 before the balance falls. The same $100 payment still works, but only $30 reaches principal in month one. If new charges were $80, the payment would equal interest plus new charges and the calculator would correctly show No payoff.
APR, daily interest, and why this page uses months
Credit card agreements commonly disclose APR, while issuers often calculate purchase interest from a daily periodic rate and an average daily balance. That daily method is more precise for a single statement period because it reflects transaction timing. This payoff hub uses monthly compounding instead so you can see a durable plan with a fixed payment and optional monthly spending. The trade off is clarity over statement-level precision.
If you need to estimate one month’s finance charge from an average daily balance, use the credit card interest calculator. If you are deciding whether to move the balance to a promotional card, use the balance transfer calculator. If you want to understand how much of your credit line is being used while you pay down the balance, run the credit utilization calculator with the balance you expect to be reported.
How interest accrues and affects the payoff path
Revolving credit is expensive because interest is charged on the balance that survives from one cycle to the next. Early in a payoff plan, a larger share of each payment goes to interest. As the balance falls, the interest portion falls too, and more of the same payment reaches principal. That is why adding even a small extra amount can have a compounding benefit: it lowers the next balance, which lowers the next interest charge, which lets the following payment do more work.
New purchases move the plan in the opposite direction. A cardholder who pays $100 but adds $40 of spending is not really attacking the debt with $100. Under this model, the payment must first absorb interest and the new charge. Only the remainder reduces the old balance. For a realistic plan, keep new spending separate or enter it honestly.
Utilization and credit-score context
Payoff planning also intersects with credit utilization, the percentage of available revolving credit being used. A falling balance can lower utilization if the credit limit stays the same, which may help the credit profile reported to credit bureaus. Utilization is not calculated in this payoff tool because it needs a credit limit, but you can estimate it with the credit utilization calculator. For example, a $2,000 balance on a $6,000 limit is about 33.3% utilization before any new purchases or payments post.
Practical payoff tips
- Freeze or reduce new card spending while using a payoff plan.
- Make more than the minimum when possible, especially on high-APR balances.
- Automate at least the required payment to reduce late-fee and penalty-APR risk.
- Re-run the calculator after rate changes, major purchases, or a one-time extra payment.
- Compare balance-transfer savings only after including the transfer fee and the regular APR after the promotional period.
Informational note
This calculator is educational and does not replace your card agreement, statement, or advice from a qualified financial professional. Issuer methods can include daily balance calculations, different APRs for purchases and cash advances, promotional rules, fees, and rounding. Your statement is the source for the actual payment due and finance charge.
Sources
- CFPB, Credit cards — consumer resources for comparing, managing, and understanding credit cards.
- CFPB, How do I calculate my credit card interest? — explanation of daily periodic rate and average daily balance interest.
- CFPB, What is a grace period for a credit card? — how paying in full can affect purchase interest.
- Federal Reserve, Credit Card Repayment Calculator announcement — public consumer repayment-planning resource.