How Much Interest Does a $5,000 Credit Card Balance Cost?

A $5,000 credit card balance can generate more interest than many borrowers expect, especially when the APR is above 20%. The actual cost depends on the rate, how long the balance stays unpaid, and whether you pay more than the minimum.

Example used on this page: $5,000 balance and 22% APR.

Estimated monthly interest

About $91.67

Estimated yearly interest

About $1,100

Why the cost keeps growing

Interest keeps adding up when the principal stays high and payments remain low.

What changes the result most

Your APR, your balance, and how fast you reduce the debt drive the total cost.


Short answer

A realistic estimate is that a $5,000 credit card balance at 22% APR costs about $91.67 per month in interest if the balance stays near that level.

Over a full year, that works out to roughly $1,100 in interest if the balance does not fall much.

The main takeaway is that interest becomes expensive when a balance lingers. Even a relatively modest balance can rack up four figures of interest over time if payments are too small.

Compare other balances:

Estimate your own interest cost

Open the Credit Card Interest Calculator →
Enter your balance, APR, and payment to estimate monthly interest, yearly interest, and total cost.

Worked example: $5,000 at 22% APR

This example answers a common question: how much interest does a $5,000 balance produce before you make meaningful progress on the principal?

Input Value
Starting balance $5,000
APR 22%
Estimated monthly interest $91.67
Estimated yearly interest $1,100.04
Important note Actual results change as the balance rises or falls.

This does not mean you will automatically pay exactly $1,100 over the next year. It means that if the balance remains close to $5,000, the interest cost stays in that general range.

As the principal drops, monthly interest falls too. But when payments barely move the balance, interest keeps taking a large share of each payment.


What changes the interest cost?

The interest on a credit card balance is mainly driven by:

  • APR: a higher rate raises the amount charged each month.
  • Balance: larger balances generate more interest.
  • Repayment speed: faster principal reduction lowers future interest charges.

Even with the same $5,000 balance, the interest picture changes noticeably from one APR to another.

APR Approx. monthly interest Approx. yearly interest
18% $75.00 $900.00
22% $91.67 $1,100.04
26% $108.33 $1,299.96

That is why lowering the rate can matter so much. A difference of only a few percentage points can save hundreds of dollars per year on the same balance.


How to reduce the interest you pay

If your goal is to shrink the total cost of a $5,000 balance, the most effective moves are usually:

  • paying more than the minimum whenever possible,
  • avoiding new charges while paying the balance down,
  • testing a faster repayment plan, or
  • comparing whether a lower-rate option would reduce the cost.

Extra payments help because they reduce principal earlier, which means future interest is calculated on a smaller balance.

See how much faster extra payments work

Extra Payment Impact Calculator →
Compare your current repayment path with a higher monthly payment to estimate time saved and interest saved.

Check your full payoff timeline

Debt Payoff Timeline Calculator →
Estimate how long repayment could take and how much total interest you may pay based on your current monthly payment.

Compare a lower-rate option

Debt Consolidation Comparison Calculator →
Compare your current balance against a lower-rate loan scenario to see whether the total cost could improve.

Common questions

How much monthly interest does a $5,000 credit card balance cost at 22% APR?

It is about $91.67 per month if the balance remains close to $5,000.

How much interest does a $5,000 balance cost in a year?

At 22% APR, it is about $1,100 over a year if the balance stays near the same level.

Why does the total interest vary from person to person?

Because the total depends on how much you pay, whether you add new purchases, and how quickly the principal declines.



Quick summary

$5,000 can still be expensive

At common credit card APRs, even a mid-sized balance can generate hundreds of dollars of interest per year.

APR matters a lot

The same $5,000 balance costs far more at 26% APR than at 18% APR.

Slow payoff raises the cost

When the principal stays high, interest keeps eating into each payment.

Your exact numbers will differ

Your real cost depends on your APR, monthly payment, and how quickly the balance drops.

Start with the credit card interest calculator, then compare your payoff timeline or test extra payments to see how much of the cost you can cut.