Estimate the interest your balance generates each month, what it could cost over a year at your current APR, and how much total interest you may pay before the debt is fully repaid.
This calculator estimates credit card interest by applying APR ÷ 12 to the entered balance, then modeling how the balance changes with the monthly payment and optional extra payment.
It shows the estimated interest charged before the next payment, a simple annual interest snapshot, total interest until payoff, total paid, payoff date, and the share of the next payment going to interest.
This calculator shows how much of your current payment is being used to cover borrowing cost before the balance can move down in a meaningful way. The month-1 interest estimate shows that cost right away. The total-interest result shows what that same pattern can turn into if the payment stays on its current path all the way to payoff.
Read those numbers together, not one at a time. A payment can look decent on the surface and still leave the balance expensive to carry because too much of it is going to interest before more of the payment starts reducing principal.
The key question is how much of your payment is still going to interest. When that share stays high, the balance can stay expensive for much longer than the payment amount seems to suggest.
These results are easiest to read in sequence. Start with the interest charged before the next payment. Next look at how much of the payment is still going to interest. Then look at the total interest until payoff. That progression shows whether the current setup is reducing the balance at a healthy pace or mostly covering the cost of carrying it.
This shows what the APR is costing you right now at the current balance. It's the clearest snapshot of what the balance is costing before the next payment even lands.
This gives you a quick look at how much of your next payment is being used to cover borrowing cost instead of reducing the balance. When that share stays elevated, progress can feel much slower than the payment amount would lead you to expect.
This highlights the full cost of carrying the balance through the rest of the repayment path at the entered payment amount. It's often the easiest way to see whether the current setup is leaving the debt around long enough to become expensive.
Some results show a payment that's moving the balance down, just not by much once interest takes its share. That's where a debt can feel discouraging. Money is going out every month, but the balance isn't changing fast enough to feel like the payment is making progress.
When those things show up together, the payment is leaving the balance in place long enough for the APR to keep pulling money out of the plan month after month.
Not every result points to a serious interest problem. Some show a payment that's already getting enough of the monthly cost out of the way for the balance to start coming down in a way you can actually feel.
When the payment is already sending a healthy share to principal, the balance is in a better spot. Extra payment can still improve the result, though the current plan may already be doing solid work.
If the result feels heavier than it should, the next step is to figure out what's making it heavy. Sometimes the problem is that the payment is too small for the balance. Other times the APR is taking such a large share that a small payment increase won't change the result enough to matter.
If the balance is coming down but the payoff path still looks too long and too expensive, a higher monthly payment may be enough to speed up the result at a useful pace.
If the current setup isn't far from where you want it, even a relatively small recurring extra payment can move more of each month toward principal and reduce the interest still ahead.
If too much of the payment is still being absorbed by interest, the APR may be the bigger source of pressure. In that kind of setup, a lower-rate path may improve the result more than a small increase in payment.
These guides explain how credit card interest builds over time, how repayment speed affects total borrowing cost, and why minimum payments can dramatically extend repayment.