Credit Card Payoff Calculator: How Long to Pay Off Your Balance

Credit card debt is the most expensive form of consumer debt, with average rates now exceeding 24%. See exactly how long it will take to become debt-free and how much interest you’ll pay.

Table of Contents

Credit Card Payoff Timeline

How long it takes to pay off common balances at different payment levels (assuming 24.37% APR — the current national average):

Balance Min. Payment Payoff Time Total Interest Monthly Payment for 2-Year Payoff
$1,000 $25 5 years $501 $53
$2,500 $63 6 years $1,948 $132
$5,000 $100 9+ years $5,840 $264
$7,500 $150 9+ years $8,571 $396
$10,000 $200 9+ years $11,680 $527
$15,000 $300 9+ years $17,268 $791
$20,000 $400 9+ years $23,360 $1,054

Minimum payments are designed to keep you in debt. Even modest increases dramatically reduce your payoff timeline.

The True Cost of Minimum Payments

Minimum payments typically equal 1-2% of your balance or $25-$35, whichever is greater. Here’s why that’s a problem:

Example: $5,000 balance at 24% APR

Payment Strategy Monthly Payment Payoff Time Total Interest Paid Total Cost
Minimum only $100 9.4 years $5,840 $10,840
$150/month $150 4.2 years $2,620 $7,620
$200/month $200 2.8 years $1,658 $6,658
$300/month $300 1.7 years $933 $5,933
$500/month $500 11 months $527 $5,527

Paying $200 instead of $100 saves $4,182 in interest and 6.6 years.

How Credit Card Interest Works

Credit card interest compounds daily, which makes it especially expensive:

  1. Daily rate = APR ÷ 365 (e.g., 24% ÷ 365 = 0.0658%)
  2. Daily interest = Balance × daily rate
  3. Interest accrues on previous interest (compounding)

At 24% APR on a $10,000 balance:

  • Daily interest: $6.58
  • Monthly interest: ~$200
  • Annual interest: ~$2,400

This means the first $200 of a $200 minimum payment goes entirely to interest — nothing reduces the balance. Learn more about how credit card interest works.

Debt Payoff Strategies

Debt Avalanche (Mathematically Optimal)

Pay minimums on everything, put extra money toward the highest-rate card first.

Pros: Saves the most money in interest Cons: May take longer to see a card fully paid off

Debt Snowball (Psychologically Motivating)

Pay minimums on everything, put extra money toward the smallest balance first.

Pros: Quick wins build momentum Cons: Costs more in total interest

For a detailed comparison, see our debt payoff strategies guide or try the debt payoff calculator.

Balance Transfer

Transfer high-rate debt to a 0% APR card. Typical offers:

Feature Typical Offer
0% APR period 15-21 months
Transfer fee 3-5%
Regular APR after 18-26%

A 3% transfer fee on $5,000 ($150) is far less than $2,600+ in interest over 4 years.

Debt Consolidation Loan

A personal loan at 8-12% can replace credit card debt at 20-28%:

Consolidation Method Average Rate Best For
Personal loan 8-12% Good credit, $5K+
Balance transfer card 0% (promo) Good credit, <$15K
Home equity loan 7-9% Homeowners, large balances
401(k) loan Prime + 1% Last resort

Learn more: debt consolidation loans.

Average Credit Card Debt in America

For context, here’s where Americans stand:

Metric Amount
Average credit card balance $6,501
Average number of cards 3.9
Average APR 24.37%
Total US credit card debt $1.17 trillion
Households carrying a balance 46%

See state-by-state data: average credit card debt by state.

Key Takeaways

  1. Minimum payments are a trap — a $5,000 balance can take 9+ years and cost over $5,800 in interest
  2. Even $50-$100 extra/month dramatically cuts your payoff timeline and interest costs
  3. Attack the highest-rate debt first (avalanche method) to save the most money
  4. Balance transfers can give you a 15-21 month interest-free window to pay down principal
  5. Avoid new charges on cards you’re paying off — adding to the balance undoes your progress