How Much Do You Need to Pay Each Month to Pay Off $5,000 in 5 Years?

A 5-year payoff target lowers the monthly payment compared with a faster plan, but interest still matters. Even a smaller balance can cost much more than expected when repayment is stretched across 60 months.

Example used on this page: $5,000 balance, 22% APR, and a 60-month payoff target.

Required monthly payment

About $137.97

Total interest

About $3,278.20

Total paid

About $8,278.20

Why the payment looks manageable

The balance is spread across a longer repayment window, but interest keeps building the entire time.


Short answer

In this example, you would need to pay about $137.97 per month to eliminate $5,000 of credit card debt in 5 years at 22% APR.

That repayment plan would result in about $3,278.20 of interest and a total repayment of about $8,278.20.

The payment is much lower than a 3-year target, but the tradeoff is that interest has far more time to accumulate.

Compare other balances:

Try this example in the calculator

Open the Debt Payoff Goal Calculator with this scenario →
Pre-filled with a $5,000 balance, 22% APR, and a 60-month payoff target.

Worked example: $5,000 at 22% APR paid off in 60 months

A longer payoff window can make the monthly payment feel more realistic, but it also increases the amount of total interest paid over the life of the debt.

Input Value
Starting balance $5,000
APR 22%
Target payoff period 60 months
Required monthly payment $137.97
Estimated total interest $3,278.20
Estimated total paid $8,278.20

This example shows why lower monthly payments are not always cheaper overall. The cost becomes easier to fit into a budget, but the debt stays with you longer and generates more interest.


What changes the monthly payment?

The required payment is mainly affected by:

  • Balance: larger balances need larger payments.
  • APR: higher interest rates raise the required payment.
  • Timeline: shorter payoff goals increase the monthly amount, while longer ones lower it.

That means the same $5,000 balance can produce very different payment requirements depending on how quickly you want it gone.


How to reduce the total cost

If a 5-year payoff plan feels necessary for your budget, there are still ways to improve the result:

  • add occasional extra payments,
  • raise the monthly payment when possible,
  • lower the APR if a better rate is available, or
  • avoid adding new charges while repaying the balance.

See what happens if you pay extra

Extra Payment Impact Calculator →
Estimate how much interest and time you could save by increasing the payment above the minimum needed for your target.

Compare a lower-rate option

Debt Consolidation Comparison Calculator →
Compare your current repayment path with a lower-rate option to see whether the total cost improves.


Common questions

Is about $137.97 per month enough to pay off $5,000 in 5 years?

In this example, yes. At 22% APR, that monthly payment is enough to pay off the balance in 60 months.

Why is the total interest still so high?

Because a 5-year payoff window gives interest many more months to accumulate than a faster repayment plan.

What lowers the total repayment cost the most?

Usually paying faster or lowering the APR.


Quick summary

Longer timelines lower the payment

A 5-year goal usually feels more affordable month to month than a 3-year target.

But the total cost rises

More time means more interest, even on a smaller balance.

APR still matters

The required payment and total repayment change significantly as the interest rate changes.

Use your own numbers

Your actual payment depends on your balance, APR, and target payoff period.

Start with the pre-filled payoff goal calculator, then compare faster timelines or extra payments to see how much interest you may be able to cut.