What A Credit Card Payment Calculator Can Tell You
Not everyone is aware that they can figure out important information about debt that they have and/or debt that they might take on with a credit card payment calculator.
A credit card payment calculator is easy to find on the Internet, and there are a lot of different options for them. They are all designed to do the same thing, though, which is tell a person how long he or she will have to pay on his or her credit card based on several factors.
When using these types of calculators, you will probably have to enter the following information:
- The total amount that you currently owe on your credit card (if you round the number, always round up, not down)
- What the absolute minimum payment that you can make actually is
- What percentage of the card balance is the minimum you can pay (usually 2%, but some cards are higher)
- The interest rate that you are paying
Putting In That Information Gets Me…What?
From this information the credit card payment calculator can tell you not only how many years it will take for you to pay off that bill if you always make only the minimum payment, but how much you will pay in interest.
This is incredibly important, because credit card debt can be very difficult to pay off, and it can take much longer than most people think that it will. In addition, interest rates can change if you are late on any payments, and this can adversely affect your credit, making everything else that you buy cost more as well.
This quickly becomes a problem for people who don’t have a lot of money to spare. They might not be able to pay a higher rate for things that they need to buy on credit, or they might have trouble paying some of their other bills. This is naturally a very serious problem, especially for middle and lower income people – the ones who rely most on their credit cards.
Here’s An Example:
If you owe $2000 on your credit card with a 10 percent interest rate, a credit card payment calculator tells you that you will pay over $1000 extra in interest over 15 years if you only pay the minimum. That is a lot of interest, but an 18 percent interest rate raises that to over 30 years.
The biggest change, though, is the extra interest paid. That $1000 in interest goes to almost $5000 in interest with only that 8 percent interest rate change. That’s a $4000 increase in interest paid back and double the length of time to pay it off, just for an 8 percent difference.
It would mean that your $2000 balance would end up costing you $6000
Pay more than the minimum payment, as much extra as you can, as often as you can. Always. People think about putting that money in the bank, but no checking or savings account is going to give you an 18 percent return. Saving is important too, so if you feel you have to do that, take ½ of what you would have saved and save it. Take the other ½ and put it toward the credit card payment. Even a little extra can help make a big difference.
