Credit Card Payoff Calculator

Find out when you will be debt-free and how extra payments accelerate your payoff

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Credit Card Payoff Calculator

How Long Until You Are Debt-Free?

Your Credit Card Details
$
%
National avg: 20.97% (Fed G.19, Nov 2025)
Payment Mode
$
Time to Pay Off
3 years 2 months
Debt-free: May 2029
Your payment barely covers the interest. At this rate, payoff will take over 30 years.
$1,943
Total Interest Paid
$6,943
Total Amount Paid
Pay Off Faster — See the Savings
Payment Breakdown (First 12 Months)
Consider a Personal Loan Instead?
A fixed-rate personal loan at 12.26% APR would cost:
$0/mo for 36 months
Saving you $0 in total interest

Assumes fixed monthly payment on a constant APR. Actual payoff depends on new charges, rate changes, and payment adjustments.

Key Takeaways

  • A $5,000 credit card balance at 20.99% APR with $150/month payments takes about 3 years and 2 months to pay off, costing $1,943 in total interest.
  • Increasing your payment by just $50 to $200/month cuts the payoff time to 2 years and 5 months, saving $531 in interest.
  • The calculator has two modes: “Fixed amount” shows how long your current payment takes, while “Debt-free by” calculates the exact payment needed to hit your target date.
  • The “Pay Off Faster” cards show three incremental payment increases with the time saved and dollars saved for each, letting you pick the acceleration level that fits your budget.
  • At the bottom, the calculator automatically compares your credit card cost to a fixed-rate personal loan at 12.26% APR — showing potential interest savings from consolidation.

How to Use This Calculator

This calculator answers the two most common credit card payoff questions: “How long will it take to pay off my card?” and “How much do I need to pay each month to be debt-free by a specific date?”

Step 1 — Enter your current balance. This is the total amount you owe. Check your latest statement or card app for the most current number. The default is $5,000, close to the average U.S. credit card balance.

Step 2 — Set your APR. Find the interest rate on your statement under “Annual Percentage Rate.” The default of 20.99% reflects the national average credit card APR. If your card has different rates for purchases and balance transfers, enter the one that applies to the majority of your balance.

Step 3 — Choose your mode. “I pay a fixed amount” mode takes your monthly payment and calculates the payoff timeline. “I want to be debt-free by” mode takes your target date and calculates the required payment. Toggle between them to explore both questions.

Step 4 — Explore the acceleration options. In fixed-payment mode, the green “Pay Off Faster” panel shows what happens if you add $50, $100, or $200 extra per month. Click any card to automatically set that payment and update all results. In target mode, the cards show three timeline options (12, 24, 36 months) with the required payment for each.

Planning a credit card payoff strategy with monthly payment targets

Understanding the Results

The headline number answers your primary question: either the payoff time (in fixed mode) or the required monthly payment (in target mode). Below it, the total interest and total paid metrics show the full cost of carrying the balance at your current APR.

The payment breakdown chart for the first 12 months is where the reality of credit card math becomes visible. Each monthly bar splits into gold (interest) and navy (principal). In the early months, the gold portion dominates — on a $5,000 balance at 21% APR, roughly $87 of a $150 payment goes to interest and only $63 reduces your balance. This ratio improves each month as the balance declines, but the visual makes clear why minimum payments trap borrowers in debt for years.

The consolidation comparison at the bottom automatically calculates what you would pay on the same balance using a 36-month personal loan at the national average rate of 12.26%. For most credit card balances, the interest savings from switching to a fixed-rate personal loan are substantial — often $1,000–$3,000 on a $5,000–$10,000 balance.

💡 Pro Tip: If your current payment barely covers the interest (the warning appears in red), even a small increase makes a dramatic difference. On a $5,000 balance at 21% APR, the minimum payment of around $100 takes 9+ years and costs $4,800+ in interest. Raising it to $200 cuts payoff to 2.5 years and $1,121 in interest — a $3,700 savings from just $100 extra per month. The “Pay Off Faster” cards above show these exact tradeoffs for your specific balance.

Credit Card Payoff Strategies Compared

StrategyBest ForTypical Savings on $5KTrade-Off
Pay more than minimumEveryone$1,000–$3,700Requires budget discipline
Balance transfer (0% intro)Good credit (680+)$800–$1,5003%–5% transfer fee; must pay off in intro period
Debt consolidation loanFair+ credit (640+)$1,200–$2,500Fixed payment; possible origination fee
Debt snowballMultiple cardsVariesPays smallest balance first for motivation
Debt avalancheMultiple cardsMost savings (math-optimal)Pays highest APR first; slower psychological wins
💡 Pro Tip: If you have multiple cards, use the Debt Consolidation Calculator to compare rolling all balances into a single loan. For a single card, use this payoff calculator to find the payment that fits your budget, then set up autopay for that exact amount. Autopay prevents the temptation to pay only the minimum.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to pay off a $5,000 credit card balance?

At the average credit card APR of 20.99% with a $150/month fixed payment, a $5,000 balance takes about 38 months (just over 3 years) to pay off, with approximately $1,943 in total interest. Making only the minimum payment (typically 1%–3% of the balance) extends this to 15–20+ years and costs $5,000+ in interest — often more than the original balance.

What is the minimum payment on a credit card?

Most issuers set the minimum at the greater of $25 or 1%–3% of your balance. On a $5,000 balance, that is typically $50–$150 initially, declining as the balance decreases. The declining minimum is what traps borrowers — each month you pay less, extending the payoff by years. This calculator uses a fixed payment, which is the fastest path to payoff.

Should I pay off my credit card or save money?

Pay the card first. At 20%+ APR, every dollar of credit card interest costs more than almost any savings or investment return. A high-yield savings account earns 4%–5%. Your credit card charges 20%+. Paying down the card gives you a guaranteed 20%+ return on every dollar. Build savings after the card is paid off.

How much interest am I paying each month?

Monthly interest equals your balance multiplied by your APR divided by 12. On a $5,000 balance at 20.99% APR: $5,000 × 0.2099 / 12 = $87.46 per month. If your payment is $150, only $62.54 reduces the balance. The payment breakdown chart in the calculator above shows this split visually for each of the first 12 months.

Does paying off a credit card improve my credit score?

Yes, significantly. Paying down your balance lowers your credit utilization ratio, which accounts for about 30% of your FICO score. Reducing utilization from 50% to under 10% can improve your score by 50–100 points. See our credit score impact guide for the full timeline.

Is it better to pay a credit card or get a personal loan?

If your credit card APR is above 15% and you qualify for a personal loan at 12% or lower, the loan saves money. The fixed payment also creates accountability — no option to pay only the minimum. Use the consolidation comparison at the bottom of this calculator to see the exact difference for your balance. Our personal loan vs credit card guide covers the full decision framework.

Financial Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates for educational purposes only. Actual payoff times depend on new charges, payment changes, APR adjustments, and billing cycle specifics. This calculator assumes no new purchases and a constant APR. See our editorial policy.

References & Further Reading

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