Credit Card Payoff Calculator
Last updated: May 2026
Use this calculator when a credit card balance needs a fixed payoff plan. Credit cards are different from many installment loans because the APR is often high, minimum payments can be low, and new spending can reset progress. This page focuses on a fixed monthly payment against one balance.
The goal is to show how long payoff takes, how much interest accrues, and how much faster the debt can clear if the payment rises by $100 or $250 per month.
Turn a card balance into a payoff plan.
Enter a card balance, APR, and fixed payment to estimate payoff.
Fixed payments beat drifting minimums
A credit card payoff plan becomes clearer when you choose a fixed payment and keep paying that amount even as the required minimum falls. If you only follow a shrinking minimum, the balance can last much longer because the payment falls as the balance falls.
This calculator does not model new purchases. It assumes the balance is being paid down, not reused. If new spending continues, the payoff date can be pushed out or disappear entirely.
APR and payment checks
Credit-card APR can make interest grow quickly. If the fixed payment barely exceeds monthly interest, the payoff plan may be fragile. Run the +$100 and +$250 scenarios before deciding the baseline is enough.
Baseline, +$100, and +$250 payment paths
The comparison table shows how higher fixed payments change payoff time and interest. These rows are intentionally framed as payment increases because the borrower usually controls payment amount more directly than APR.
| Scenario | Payment | Payoff Time | Interest | Total Paid |
|---|
APR and payment pressure
The APR rows show how expensive the balance becomes if the rate changes. The payment rows show whether a small monthly increase creates a meaningful interest saving. For high-APR cards, payment increases often create visible improvements.
| Change | Months Difference | Interest Difference |
|---|
Balance decline checkpoints
The table shows checkpoints along the fixed-payment path. It helps reveal whether the balance is shrinking quickly or whether interest is consuming too much of the payment early on.
| Checkpoint | Principal Paid | Interest Paid | Remaining Balance |
|---|
Example: $5,000 at 22% APR
Suppose a card balance is $5,000 at 22% APR and the fixed payment is $200 per month. The calculator estimates payoff time and total interest, then compares the result with $300 and $450 monthly payments. The point is not to shame the baseline payment. The point is to show the price of time at a high APR.
If the +$100 row cuts several months and a meaningful amount of interest, that may be a strong reason to redirect temporary cash toward the card. If the higher payment is not realistic, the scenario link can still help you record the current plan and revisit it when income or expenses change.
Why credit card payoff needs its own page
Credit card debt deserves separate treatment because the required minimum payment can create a false sense of progress. A statement may show a payment that keeps the account current, but current is not the same as on track. This calculator asks what happens when you choose a fixed payment and stop letting the payment drift down as the balance falls.
Another important decision is whether to stop new spending on the card during payoff. If purchases continue, the calculator's payoff date no longer describes the whole account. For planning, separate old debt from new monthly spending. One clean approach is to stop using the card, set a fixed payoff payment, and use the scenario link to review progress monthly. If you use a balance transfer, compare the transfer fee, promotional period, and post-promotion APR before assuming it saves money.
Credit card payoff mistakes
- Following only the shrinking minimum payment.
- Continuing new purchases while expecting the payoff date to hold.
- Ignoring balance transfer fees or promotional APR end dates.
- Comparing monthly payment without comparing total interest.
- Paying extra one month and lowering the payment the next month.
- Assuming every card applies payments to balances the same way.
A final mistake is focusing only on APR while ignoring behavior. A lower-rate transfer can help, but only if the old card does not refill and the payoff payment stays fixed. The calculator is most useful when paired with a spending rule that prevents the balance from growing again.
For a cleaner comparison, run the card once with no new charges and once with a realistic extra payment. The gap between those two results is the payoff discipline value.
How card payoff is estimated
The calculator applies monthly interest to the balance, subtracts the interest from the fixed payment, and applies the rest to principal. It repeats this until payoff or until the payment fails to cover interest. This is a simplified monthly model.
Actual card issuers may use daily periodic rates, different statement timing, fees, penalty APRs, promotional balances, and payment allocation rules. Use this as a planning estimate and check issuer disclosures for account-specific details. The methodology page explains broader limits.
Good fits
- Planning one card payoff.
- Testing fixed payment increases.
- Estimating interest at high APR.
- Comparing payoff speed before a balance transfer.
- Creating a shareable payoff scenario.
Limits
- Cards with new purchases every month.
- Promotional APR expiration schedules.
- Multiple balance categories.
- Credit score prediction.
- Debt settlement, legal, or hardship advice.
Credit card payoff questions
Credit card payoff estimates are most useful when the balance is frozen and the payment is fixed. These answers explain how to read that kind of payoff plan.
Why is my payoff date so far away?
High APR and low payments mean much of each early payment goes to interest rather than principal.
Should I pay more than the minimum?
A fixed payment above the minimum can shorten payoff time and reduce interest.
Does this include new purchases?
No. New purchases would change the balance and can push payoff farther away.
What if I have a promotional APR?
Model the current APR and then a higher APR separately if the promotion expires.
Is a balance transfer included?
No. Transfer fees and promotional periods need separate comparison.
What payment should I choose?
Choose an amount you can actually repeat, then compare higher payments to see the trade-off.
Can this replace issuer disclosures?
No. Use issuer statements for exact account terms.
Is this advice?
No. It is an educational estimate, not financial, legal, tax, lending, or credit advice.
Plan the payoff
Educational estimate only. This calculator does not provide financial, investment, tax, legal, credit, or lending advice. Use it as a payoff planning tool, not as a substitute for issuer terms, hardship programs, or debt counseling.