Credit Card Interest Calculator (2026) – Minimum Payment Trap & Real Interest Cost
How Credit Card Interest is Calculated in India
Credit card interest in India is among the most expensive forms of borrowing — typically 30%–48% per annum (2.5%–4% per month). Understanding exactly how it is calculated helps you avoid costly mistakes. Unlike simple bank loans where interest is calculated monthly, credit card interest is calculated daily on the outstanding balance.
The Finance Charge Calculation Method
Finance Charge = Outstanding Balance × Daily Rate × Number of Days
Example: ₹25,000 outstanding, 36% p.a., 30 days
Daily Rate = 36 ÷ 365 = 0.0986%/day
Finance Charge = 25,000 × 0.000986 × 30 = ₹739.73
The Most Important Rule: Pay FULL Due Before Due Date
Indian credit cards have a credit-free period (grace period) of 20–50 days from the transaction date to the due date. If you pay the total outstanding by the due date every month, you pay zero interest. This is how credit cards are designed to be used — as a payment instrument, not a borrowing instrument.
Interest is triggered in two scenarios: (1) You do not pay the full amount by the due date — in which case interest is charged from the transaction date (not just from the due date); (2) You take a cash advance — interest starts from the day of withdrawal with no grace period.
Why Interest Gets So High So Fast
At 36% p.a. (the most common credit card rate in India), ₹1 lakh of outstanding balance accumulates ₹3,000 in interest every month. In one year, that’s ₹36,000 in interest alone — on top of the original ₹1 lakh. And if you keep paying only minimums, the compounding makes it far worse.
The Minimum Payment Trap – Real Numbers That Will Shock You
The minimum payment on most Indian credit cards is 5% of the outstanding balance or ₹200 (whichever is higher). This seems manageable — but it is the most expensive trap in personal finance. Here is what actually happens when you pay only the minimum:
| Outstanding | APR | Min Payment (5%) | Months to Clear | Total Interest Paid | Total Paid |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ₹10,000 | 36% | ₹500/month | 29 months | ₹4,621 | ₹14,621 |
| ₹25,000 | 36% | ₹1,250/month | 31 months | ₹11,891 | ₹36,891 |
| ₹50,000 | 36% | ₹2,500/month | 32 months | ₹24,186 | ₹74,186 |
| ₹1,00,000 | 36% | ₹5,000/month | 33 months | ₹49,072 | ₹1,49,072 |
| ₹2,00,000 | 36% | ₹10,000/month | 34 months | ₹99,240 | ₹2,99,240 |
*Calculated using standard reducing balance method with 5% minimum payment. Actual months may vary slightly based on bank’s specific calculation method.
What You Should Do Instead
If you cannot pay the full amount, the best strategy is to pay as much above the minimum as possible. Even doubling the minimum payment from 5% to 10% of the balance dramatically reduces both the time to clear the debt and the total interest paid. Use our Credit Card Payoff Calculator to see exactly how much you save by paying more than the minimum each month.
Credit Card Interest Rates – All Major Banks India 2026
Credit card annual percentage rates (APR) vary significantly across Indian banks and card categories. Entry-level cards typically have higher APR than premium cards. Here are the current rates as of April 2026:
| Bank | Annual Rate (APR) | Monthly Rate | Daily Rate | Cash Advance Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HDFC Bank | 12%–36% | 1%–3% | 0.033%–0.099% | 2.5%/month |
| SBI Card | 36%–42% | 3%–3.5% | 0.099%–0.115% | 3.5%/month |
| ICICI Bank | 30%–42% | 2.5%–3.5% | 0.082%–0.115% | 2.5%–3.5%/month |
| Axis Bank | 30%–46% | 2.5%–3.83% | 0.082%–0.126% | 2.95%/month |
| Kotak Bank | 36%–42% | 3%–3.5% | 0.099%–0.115% | 3.5%/month |
| Yes Bank | 36%–44% | 3%–3.67% | 0.099%–0.121% | 3.5%/month |
| IndusInd Bank | 24%–42% | 2%–3.5% | 0.066%–0.115% | 3%/month |
| Standard Chartered | 24%–40% | 2%–3.33% | 0.066%–0.110% | 3%/month |
| American Express | 18%–36% | 1.5%–3% | 0.049%–0.099% | 3%/month |
| RBL Bank | 36%–48% | 3%–4% | 0.099%–0.132% | 4%/month |
*Rates as of April 2026. APR varies by card type and credit score. Premium cards (Infinia, Diners Black, Regalia Gold) get lower rates. Cash advance rates are always higher than purchase rates and have no grace period.
How to Reduce Credit Card Interest – 7 Proven Strategies
1. Always Pay Full Due by Due Date
The most powerful strategy — pay the total outstanding (not just minimum) before the due date every month. This makes credit card interest zero. Set up auto-debit from your savings account for the full amount every month — you will never pay interest again.
2. Balance Transfer to 0% Card
Many banks offer 0% balance transfer offers for 3–6 months with a small fee (1%–2%). Transfer your high-interest outstanding to such an offer and pay off the balance during the interest-free period. Use our Balance Transfer Calculator to see if this makes sense for your situation.
3. Take a Personal Loan to Clear CC Debt
Personal loan at 12%–16% p.a. vs credit card at 36%–42% p.a. — taking a personal loan to clear your entire credit card outstanding in one shot and then repaying the cheaper personal loan can save enormous amounts in interest. This is called debt consolidation and is one of the smartest financial moves for people trapped in credit card debt.
4. Increase Your Monthly Payment Above Minimum
Even paying 10% instead of 5% of the outstanding each month cuts debt clearance time nearly in half and saves thousands in interest. Use the Minimum Payment tab in our calculator above to see exact savings from different payment amounts.
5. Stop Using the Card with Outstanding Balance
Many people continue using their credit card while carrying a revolving balance. Stop all card usage until the outstanding is fully cleared — otherwise, new purchases attract retroactive interest from day one.
6. Call Bank for Rate Reduction
Long-standing customers with good payment history can call their bank’s customer care and request a temporary or permanent reduction in interest rate. Banks do not advertise this, but they often agree to reduce rates by 6%–12% to retain good customers who might otherwise transfer their balance or cancel the card.
7. Use RBI Complaint Portal if Bank Overcharges
Under RBI guidelines, banks must have a transparent billing process. If you notice unexplained interest charges or fees, first complain to the bank’s grievance officer. If unresolved, file a complaint on the RBI Ombudsman portal (rbi.org.in). Banks are legally required to respond and resolve within 30 days.