Credit Card Payoff Calculator

Find out exactly how long it will take to clear your balance, how much interest you will pay, and your payoff date — whether you pay the minimum or a fixed amount each month.

Enter Your Card Details
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Typical Canadian credit card APR is 19.99% — 22.99%.
Most Canadian and US cards use the 2% method. Check your statement for your card’s exact rule.

Your Repayment Summary

Monthly Payment
Total Interest
Payoff Date
Principal vs. Total Interest
Principal Interest
Month-by-Month Repayment Schedule
Month Payment Principal Interest Remaining Balance

About the Credit Card Payoff Calculator

Credit card debt is one of the most expensive forms of borrowing. With typical annual interest rates between 19.99% and 22.99% in Canada, and 18%–29.99% in the United States, even a modest balance can take many years to clear if you only pay the minimum each month — and cost you far more in interest than the original purchase price.

Our free credit card repayment calculator shows you exactly how long it will take to pay off your balance under three strategies: paying the minimum each month, paying a fixed amount of your choosing, or working backward from a target payoff date to see what monthly payment you need.

How the Minimum Payment Trap Works

Most card issuers calculate the minimum payment as approximately 2% of your outstanding balance (or a small fixed floor, whichever is greater). Because the minimum drops as your balance shrinks, you end up paying less each month — but the interest keeps compounding. A $5,000 balance at 19.99% APR paid at the 2% minimum can take over 30 years to clear and cost more than $7,000 in interest alone.

The calculator illustrates this starkly. Switch from minimum to a fixed $150 monthly payment on that same balance and payoff time drops to under 4 years with roughly $3,500 in interest saved.

How Interest Is Calculated

Credit card interest compounds daily in Canada and the United States (monthly compounding in most UK and Australian cards). This calculator uses monthly compounding for simplicity, which is standard for repayment planning. The monthly rate is your APR divided by 12. Each month, interest is applied to your outstanding balance before your payment is deducted.

Strategies to Pay Off Faster

Pay more than the minimum. Even an extra $50 per month above the minimum can shave years off your repayment timeline. The earlier you make extra payments, the more interest you save.

Use the avalanche method. If you carry balances on multiple cards, focus every extra dollar on the card with the highest interest rate first while paying the minimum on the others. Once the highest-rate card is cleared, roll that payment into the next. This is mathematically the fastest way to become debt-free.

Consider a balance transfer. Many card issuers offer promotional 0% balance transfer rates for 6–21 months. Transferring your balance and paying aggressively during the promo period can eliminate interest entirely — but watch for transfer fees (typically 1%–3%).

Country-Specific Notes

Canada: The standard purchase APR is 19.99% on most major cards. Low-rate cards (typically 12.99%–14.99%) are available but often require a credit check. The minimum payment floor is usually $10 or 2%–3% of the balance.

United States: Variable APRs are set as a benchmark rate (prime) plus a margin. The average US credit card APR as of 2026 is around 20%–27%. The CARD Act requires minimum payments to cover at least the interest charge plus 1% of principal.

United Kingdom: Representative APRs typically range from 22.9% to 34.9%. Most UK cards compound interest monthly. The minimum payment is usually 1%–2% of balance plus the month’s interest, or a fixed floor of £25.

Australia: Purchase rates typically range from 13.99% to 22.74% on major cards. The minimum payment is usually 2% of the closing balance or AU$25, whichever is greater.

Frequently Asked Questions

The calculator uses standard monthly compounding (APR ÷ 12 applied to the opening monthly balance). Results are accurate for planning purposes. Actual card statements may differ slightly due to daily compounding, billing cycle variations, or fees charged by your issuer. Always check your card’s terms and conditions for exact rules.
A missed payment typically triggers a late fee (C$35–C$48 in Canada; US$27–US$41 in the US) and may cause your APR to jump to a penalty rate, sometimes exceeding 29.99%. This calculator assumes consistent on-time payments every month. Missed payments are not modelled and will increase both your payoff time and total interest significantly.
This depends on the interest rate. Paying off 19.99% credit card debt gives a guaranteed risk-free return equal to that rate — better than most investment vehicles. The general rule: if the card APR exceeds the expected after-tax investment return, pay the card first. If you have an emergency fund and an employer RRSP or 401(k) match, capture the match first (it is an instant 50%–100% return) then direct remaining cash to the card.
APR (Annual Percentage Rate) is the yearly interest rate stated on your card agreement. For repayment calculations, divide APR by 12 to get the monthly periodic rate. For example, 19.99% APR equals approximately 1.666% per month. In Canada and the UK this is sometimes called the “nominal annual rate.” The effective annual rate (EAR) is slightly higher due to monthly compounding, but APR is the standard figure used on statements.
Enter the number of months in which you want to be completely debt-free. The calculator uses the standard loan payment formula to determine the fixed monthly payment required to reach zero balance in exactly that timeframe. This is useful for budgeting — for example, if you want to clear a $3,000 balance before a 12-month promotional rate expires.
The fixed payment and target date modes work for any revolving or term debt with a fixed APR — store cards, lines of credit, or personal loans with no origination fee. For instalment loans (mortgages, car loans, personal loans) with a defined term, our Loan Repayment Calculator is a better fit.
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