Find your exact debt-free date, understand your spending by category, and get personalised advice to eliminate credit card debt faster and cheaper.
Enter your current balance, interest rate and monthly payment
A personal loan at 12–18% p.a. is far cheaper than a credit card at 36–48%. Calculate the exact EMI and total interest — see if a balance transfer or personal loan saves you money.
Calculate EMI →Every rupee freed from credit card interest can be redirected into a SIP. The same ₹3,000/month that paid debt, invested at 12% for 10 years, becomes ₹6.9 lakhs. Start right here.
Calculate SIP →My neighbour Sudhir had a credit card balance of ₹42,000. Nothing catastrophic — a new phone, a few restaurant dinners, one impulsive Amazon order during a sale. He paid the minimum every month — ₹2,100 — figuring he'd clear it eventually. Two years later his balance was still ₹38,000. He had paid ₹50,400 in total and had barely moved the needle. He thought he was making progress. He wasn't. The bank was collecting ₹1,470 in interest every single month before a single rupee touched his actual debt.
This is the credit card trap — and it's not an accident. Minimum payment structures are mathematically engineered to maximise bank interest income while giving you the psychological comfort of "doing something." This free credit card payoff calculator breaks the illusion. Enter your balance, interest rate, and monthly payment — and get your exact debt-free date, total interest cost, spending breakdown by category, personalised payoff advice, and a strategy comparison showing what a personal loan or higher payment could save you.
A credit card payoff calculator computes exactly how long it will take to eliminate your credit card debt based on your current balance, interest rate, and monthly payment — and shows you the total interest you'll pay along the way. Unlike a simple loan calculator, it accounts for the reducing balance method, minimum payment structures, and the compounding nature of daily/monthly interest.
This calculator goes further — it includes a spending analytics section (where is the money going?), a goal-based payoff feature (how much do I need to pay monthly to be debt-free in 12 months?), a payment strategy comparison (minimum vs higher payment vs personal loan), and personalised financial advice generated from your specific numbers. Everything you need to go from confused to in control.
Three steps, under 5 minutes. Here's what every input means:
Search your local currency from 50+ options. For INR, the RBI directive panel appears showing legal interest rate caps (3.5–4%/month) and the minimum payment rule (5% of outstanding or ₹200 minimum). For USD, the tool shows typical US APR ranges (20–29%) and balance transfer options.
Outstanding balance = the total amount on your latest credit card statement. Interest rate = the annual rate from your card's Most Important Terms & Conditions (MITC) document. India: most major bank cards charge 3.5%/month = 42% p.a. US: check your card's APR disclosure — typically 20–29%. UK: 20–30% APR is typical.
Enter what you actually plan to pay each month — not the minimum. The minimum payment field (default 5%) is used to calculate how much worse your situation would be paying minimum only, and to flag if your current payment is dangerously close to the minimum. Try different payment amounts to see their dramatic effect on your payoff date.
Enter the number of months by which you want to be debt-free. The calculator instantly computes the required monthly payment to hit that goal. This reverse-calculation is often the most motivating feature — seeing that clearing debt in 12 months requires ₹4,800/month rather than ₹3,000 makes the ask concrete and achievable.
Enter how much you typically charge to the card by category — food, shopping, travel, bills, entertainment, subscriptions etc. The calculator generates a spending breakdown chart and identifies your biggest category with a specific tip to reduce it — turning generic "spend less" advice into a concrete target number.
You'll get: your debt-free date banner, 4 key metrics, a balance decline chart, spending donut chart, full monthly payment schedule, 8–9 personalised advice cards, and a comparison panel showing minimum payment vs your plan vs ₹5k/10k payments vs a personal loan — all in one place.
Worked example: ₹50,000 balance at 42% p.a. (3.5%/month). Month 1 interest = ₹50,000 × 0.035 = ₹1,750. You pay ₹3,000. Principal reduced = ₹3,000 − ₹1,750 = ₹1,250. New balance = ₹48,750. Month 2 interest is calculated on ₹48,750 — slightly lower. This continues on a reducing balance until zero.
₹50,000 at 42% p.a. · Paying 5% minimum monthly · Debt-free in: 8+ years · Total interest paid: ~₹1,20,000 · You repay ₹1,70,000 on ₹50,000 borrowed.
₹50,000 at 42% p.a. · Paying ₹5,000/month · Debt-free in: 12 months · Total interest: ~₹10,800 · You save ₹1,09,200 vs minimum payments.
Kavya bought a MacBook on her HDFC credit card for ₹1,20,000 during a no-cost EMI sale — but then couldn't resist adding ₹30,000 in accessories that weren't part of the EMI plan. Her revolving balance sat at ₹30,000. She paid the minimum ₹1,500/month for 14 months, assuming she was making progress. She had paid ₹21,000 — but still owed ₹24,600. The calculator showed her reality: at minimum payments, she'd pay ₹26,500 in total on a ₹30,000 debt over 26 months. Switching to ₹4,000/month cleared it in 9 months and saved ₹18,000 in interest. She increased her payment the next day.
Rohan ran up ₹85,000 across two credit cards during a slow business quarter. Card A: ₹55,000 at 42% p.a. Card B: ₹30,000 at 36% p.a. Combined monthly interest: ₹2,725. He used this calculator to model a balance transfer — consolidating both to a SBI Card 0% balance transfer offer for 6 months (2.5% one-time fee = ₹2,125). During those 6 months he paid ₹14,200/month — aggressively — and cleared ₹85,250 before the promotional period ended. Total interest paid: ₹2,125 (the transfer fee). Without the balance transfer, the same payoff would have cost ₹10,900 in interest. Net saving: ₹8,775.
Pradeep had a ₹70,000 medical emergency — his father's hospitalisation — that went on his Axis Bank credit card because it was the only option at midnight. He earns ₹65,000/month with ₹45,000 in fixed expenses, leaving ₹20,000 disposable. He entered his numbers in this calculator and saw: at ₹8,000/month, he'd be debt-free in 10 months paying ₹11,200 in interest. At ₹12,000/month (cutting entertainment and dining for 6 months), he'd clear in 7 months paying ₹7,400 in interest — saving ₹3,800. He chose the aggressive path, set a 7-month goal, and hit it by cutting all non-essential card spending during that period.
Sarah had $8,400 spread across two cards — a Chase card at 24.99% APR and a store card at 29.99% APR. She selected USD in this calculator, entered both balances combined, used the highest rate (29.99%), and set her combined payment of $320/month. Result: 40 months, $4,800 in total interest. The comparison panel showed that a personal loan at 12% APR — available to her with good credit — would cut total interest to $2,200 and clear the debt in 36 months at a similar payment. She called her credit union, got a $8,500 personal loan at 11.5%, paid off both cards same day, and set up autopay on the loan. Total interest saved: $2,600.
While paying off existing debt, stop adding new charges. Put the card in a container of water and freeze it — when you feel the urge to use it, the 30-minute defrost time creates a cooling-off period. Sounds extreme; works surprisingly well. Alternatively, remove it from all saved payment methods online — the friction of re-entering card details stops impulse purchases.
If you have multiple cards, pay minimum on all except the highest-interest card. Put every extra rupee toward the highest-rate card first. Once cleared, roll the entire freed payment to the next highest-rate card. This is mathematically optimal and always saves the most in total interest — though it can feel slow if your highest-balance card is also the highest-rate.
Pay minimum on all cards except the smallest balance. Throw everything at the smallest debt first. The psychological win of eliminating a card completely keeps motivation high. Research by Harvard Business School shows people using the snowball method are more likely to eliminate all debt than avalanche users — the emotional momentum matters as much as the math.
Many banks offer 0% balance transfer for 6–12 months with a 2–3% one-time fee. On ₹80,000 debt, a 3% fee costs ₹2,400. Compare this to 6 months of interest at 42% = ₹16,800. The math is obvious. Key rule: clear the entire transferred balance before the promotional period ends — or the deferred interest kicks in retroactively at the standard rate.
A personal loan at 12–18% p.a. used to clear credit card debt at 36–48% p.a. is one of the most financially impactful moves available. On ₹1 lakh debt: credit card interest ₹42,000/year vs personal loan ₹15,000/year — saving ₹27,000 annually. Check your bank's pre-approved loan offers first — they often have lower rates and instant disbursal for existing customers.
Credit card interest is calculated daily on your outstanding balance in most countries. Paying half your monthly payment on the 1st and the other half on the 15th slightly reduces your average daily balance — meaning marginally less interest each month. Over a year, this small habit can shave 1–2 months off your payoff timeline at no extra cost.
Any unexpected money — bonus, tax refund, freelance income, a gift — apply at least 50% directly to your credit card balance as a lump sum. A ₹20,000 bonus applied to a ₹50,000 balance at 42% p.a. saves approximately ₹8,400 in interest and cuts 4–5 months off your payoff. The key is applying it immediately — within 24 hours — before lifestyle inflation absorbs it.
This works more often than people think. Banks prefer keeping customers over losing them to a competitor. Call the credit card helpline, mention your good repayment history (even if partial), and ask for a rate reduction or a hardship plan. HDFC and ICICI have been known to reduce rates by 0.25–0.5%/month for proactive customers. A 0.5% monthly reduction on ₹50,000 saves ₹250/month — ₹3,000/year — for doing nothing except asking.
Paying only the minimum is the most expensive way to carry credit card debt. On ₹50,000 at 42% p.a. with a 5% minimum payment: your first minimum payment is ₹2,500 — of which ₹1,750 is interest and only ₹750 reduces the actual debt. As the balance slowly shrinks, so does the minimum payment — creating a vicious cycle where you're paying for years but barely moving. Total repayment time: 8+ years. Total interest paid: approximately ₹1,20,000 on a ₹50,000 debt. You'll repay 3.4× the original amount. Always pay at least 2–3× the minimum payment if you cannot pay in full.
Always pay off high-interest credit card debt before investing. Here's the math: credit card interest = 36–48% p.a. (guaranteed negative return). Best equity mutual fund historical return = 12–14% p.a. (not guaranteed). Paying ₹10,000 toward a 42% credit card gives you a guaranteed 42% "return" (interest saved). Investing that ₹10,000 in equities at best gives you 12–14%. The only exception: if your employer matches provident fund contributions — contribute enough to get the full match (it's a 100% instant return), then direct everything else to credit card payoff. Once the credit card is cleared, redirect the full payment amount into SIP — you'll already have the payment discipline.
In India, most credit cards charge interest on a daily periodic rate basis — meaning your annual rate is divided by 365 to get a daily rate, and interest accrues on your outstanding balance every single day from the transaction date (if you've not paid the full previous month's bill). Example: 42% p.a. ÷ 365 = 0.1151% per day. On ₹50,000 outstanding, that's ₹57.53 in interest every day — ₹1,726/month. The RBI mandates that banks disclose this clearly in the MITC (Most Important Terms & Conditions) document. Always check your specific card's daily periodic rate — not just the advertised annual rate, which can obscure the actual daily compounding effect.
Yes, significantly. Your credit utilisation ratio — outstanding balance as a percentage of your total credit limit — is one of the biggest factors in your CIBIL score (accounts for ~30% of the score). Reducing a ₹80,000 balance on a ₹1,00,000 limit card (80% utilisation — very bad) to ₹20,000 (20% utilisation — good) can raise your CIBIL score by 40–80 points over 3–6 months. Lenders like to see utilisation below 30%. Once your credit card is paid off, keep a small recurring transaction on it and pay in full each month — this maintains the credit history without accumulating debt.
In most cases, yes — if you qualify for a rate below your current credit card rate. The logic is simple: swapping 42% debt for 15% debt immediately reduces your interest burden by 64%. On ₹1,00,000 debt, that saves ₹27,000 in annual interest. The important conditions: (1) the personal loan rate must be at least 10% lower than your card rate to justify the switch — check for processing fees (1–3%), (2) you must immediately close or freeze the credit card after paying it off — otherwise you'll run the card back up and have both the loan EMI and new card debt, (3) the EMI must fit your budget without strain — use the Loan EMI calculator on this site to verify. Pre-approved loans from your existing bank typically offer the best rates and fastest disbursal.
How credit card interest works, how to get debt-free faster, and what the RBI says about it
Credit card interest is one of the most expensive forms of debt in the world. In India, interest rates range from 36% to 48% per annum — charged daily on your outstanding balance. If you owe ₹50,000 and pay only the minimum, the bank earns ₹18,000–₹24,000 in interest from you every year — on money you've already spent.
The minimum payment requirement — typically 5% of outstanding balance in India (RBI directive) — is structured to maximise the bank's interest income. At minimum payments on ₹50,000 at 3.5%/month, your debt-free date is over 8 years away and you'll pay ₹1.2 lakh in interest on a ₹50,000 debt. That's paying back 3.4× what you borrowed.
₹50,000 at 42% p.a. · Minimum 5% · Total interest paid: ~₹1,20,000 · Time to clear: 8+ years · You pay back ₹1,70,000 on ₹50,000 borrowed.
₹50,000 at 42% p.a. · Pay ₹5,000/month · Total interest: ~₹10,800 · Time to clear: 12 months · You save ₹1,09,200 vs minimum payments.
Avalanche Method (Mathematically Optimal): Pay minimum on all cards except the highest-interest card. Throw every extra rupee at the highest-rate card. Once cleared, roll that payment to the next highest. This method saves the most money in interest.
Snowball Method (Psychologically Effective): Pay minimum on all cards except the smallest balance. Focus all extra payments on the smallest debt. The quick wins keep you motivated. Studies show snowball users are more likely to become completely debt-free.
Balance Transfer: Move your high-interest credit card debt to a 0% balance transfer card. Many banks offer 0% for 6–12 months — aggressive payoff during this window eliminates interest entirely. Watch for the 2–3% transfer fee and ensure you clear the balance before the promotional period ends.
Personal Loan Refinancing: A personal loan at 12–18% p.a. used to pay off a credit card at 36–48% halves your interest cost immediately. Use the EMI calculator on this site to compare exact savings.
The Reserve Bank of India has issued several directives to protect credit card holders:
RBI has directed banks to ensure credit card rates are "justifiable and transparent." HDFC/ICICI/SBI charge 3.5–3.75%/month. Compare your card's rate before accepting a new card.
RBI mandates minimum payment = 5% of total outstanding or ₹200, whichever is higher. Paying minimum does NOT stop interest accrual — interest charges continue on the remaining balance.
If you pay 100% of your statement balance by the due date, no interest is charged. The grace period is typically 20–25 days after statement generation. This is the only way to use a credit card interest-free.
On top of interest, late payment fees range ₹100–₹1,300 depending on your outstanding amount. Always pay at least the minimum before the due date to avoid this penalty stacking on your interest.