Credit Card EMI Calculator (2026) – Monthly EMI, Total Interest & Real Cost
📋 All Tenure Comparison – Which EMI Plan is Cheapest?
This table shows your EMI, total interest and total cost for all 6 tenure options at once. Highlighted row = your selected tenure.
| Tenure | Monthly EMI | Total Interest | Processing Fee | Total Cost | Extra vs Cash |
|---|
*Lower tenure = less total interest but higher monthly EMI. Choose based on your monthly budget vs total cost preference.
What is Credit Card EMI & How Does It Work in India?
Credit Card EMI (Equated Monthly Instalment) is a facility offered by credit card issuers and merchants that allows you to convert large purchases into smaller monthly payments spread over 3 to 24 months. Instead of paying the full amount in one billing cycle, the purchase amount is broken into equal monthly instalments, each consisting of a principal component plus interest.
In India, credit card EMI works in two ways. The first is bank-initiated EMI — you contact your bank or use their app/website to convert an existing outstanding transaction to EMI. The second is merchant EMI — at the point of purchase (online or offline), you select the EMI option during checkout. Major platforms like Amazon, Flipkart, Myntra, Croma, and Reliance Digital offer EMI options directly at checkout.
How Credit Card EMI is Processed
- Purchase: You buy an item worth ₹30,000 on your credit card
- Conversion: You convert it to 6-month EMI at 1.5% per month
- Blocking: The bank blocks ₹30,000 from your credit limit
- Monthly billing: Each month, ₹5,000 principal + interest is billed to your statement
- Restoration: As you pay EMIs, the blocked credit limit is gradually restored
Types of Credit Card EMI in India
- Standard EMI with Interest: Most common — you pay interest at the bank’s monthly rate (typically 1%–3%). Use our calculator above for exact cost.
- No Cost EMI (NCE): Merchant absorbs the interest cost — you appear to pay no interest, but the product price is typically inflated, or the merchant sacrifices their margin. See the No Cost EMI section below for the full truth.
- Pre-approved EMI: Bank pre-converts certain transactions automatically for customers with good credit history.
- Cardless EMI: Offered by fintech players like Bajaj Finserv, ZestMoney, LazyPay — linked to phone number/PAN, not a physical card.
Credit Card EMI Formula & How to Calculate It
Credit card EMI is calculated using the standard loan EMI formula on reducing balance. This is the same formula used for personal loans and home loans — the outstanding principal reduces each month as you pay EMIs, and interest is charged on the declining balance.
EMI Formula (Reducing Balance Method)
Where:
P = Principal amount (purchase amount)
r = Monthly interest rate (Annual rate ÷ 12 ÷ 100)
n = Tenure in months
Example: ₹30,000 at 1.5%/month for 6 months
r = 1.5/100 = 0.015
EMI = 30,000 × 0.015 × (1.015)^6 ÷ ((1.015)^6 – 1)
EMI = 30,000 × 0.015 × 1.0934 ÷ 0.0934
EMI = ₹5,252/month
Total paid = 5,252 × 6 = ₹31,512
Total interest = ₹1,512 (5.04% of purchase)
Flat Rate vs Reducing Balance — Key Difference
Some merchants and older EMI schemes quote a “flat rate” which appears lower but is actually more expensive than reducing balance. In flat rate, interest is calculated on the original principal for all months — in reducing balance, interest reduces as principal decreases.
Effective Annual Rate of flat rate = approximately 1.83× the stated flat rate
Example: 12% flat rate per annum ≈ 21.5% reducing balance rate
Always ask merchants: “Is this flat rate or reducing balance?”
Credit Card EMI Interest Rates – All Major Banks India 2026
Credit card EMI interest rates vary significantly across banks and card types. Premium cards (Infinia, Diners Black, Regalia) often get lower EMI rates than entry-level cards. Always check your specific card’s rate before converting — the rate shown in your bank app at the time of conversion is the rate applicable to your transaction.
| Bank | Monthly Rate | Annual Rate (p.a.) | Processing Fee | Min Transaction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HDFC Bank | 1.00%–1.25% | 12%–15% | Nil–1% | ₹2,000 |
| SBI Card | 1.50%–2.00% | 18%–24% | ₹99–299 | ₹2,000 |
| ICICI Bank | 1.00%–1.50% | 12%–18% | Nil–1% | ₹2,000 |
| Axis Bank | 1.50%–1.75% | 18%–21% | Nil–1.5% | ₹2,500 |
| Kotak Bank | 1.50%–1.75% | 18%–21% | Nil–1% | ₹2,500 |
| Yes Bank | 1.50%–2.00% | 18%–24% | 1%–1.5% | ₹3,000 |
| IndusInd Bank | 1.25%–1.75% | 15%–21% | Nil–1% | ₹5,000 |
| RBL Bank | 1.50%–2.00% | 18%–24% | ₹199–499 | ₹2,500 |
| Standard Chartered | 1.25%–1.75% | 15%–21% | Nil–1.5% | ₹5,000 |
| American Express | 0.75%–1.50% | 9%–18% | Nil–0.5% | ₹5,000 |
*Rates as of April 2026. Actual rates depend on your specific card type, credit score, and EMI tenure. Higher tenure usually has higher interest rate. Always verify in your bank app before converting.
Credit Card EMI vs Paying Full Amount – Complete Comparison
The decision to convert a purchase to EMI vs paying the full amount in the next billing cycle depends on your cash flow situation, the interest cost, and whether you can invest the money elsewhere at a higher return.
| Factor | Credit Card EMI | Pay Full Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly cash outflow | Lower (spread over months) | Higher (one-time) |
| Total cost | Higher (interest + fee) | Lowest (no extra cost) |
| Interest paid | Yes — 12%–30% p.a. | Zero |
| Reward points earned | Yes — on full purchase amount | Yes — on full amount |
| Credit limit impact | Blocked for EMI duration | Freed after payment |
| Suitable when | Cash tight, large unavoidable purchase | Cash available — always prefer this |
When EMI Makes Sense vs When It Does Not
EMI makes sense when: You have a genuine cash flow constraint and the purchase is necessary (medical expense, essential appliance). The alternative would be taking a personal loan at 14%–20% p.a. — in that case, CC EMI at 12%–18% p.a. may be comparable or cheaper.
EMI is a poor choice when: You can pay the full amount — even if it dips into savings — because interest-free savings account (3.5%–4%) or FD (7%–8%) returns are much lower than CC EMI interest (12%–30% p.a.). You are never “saving” by taking CC EMI if you have the cash available.
No Cost EMI – Is It Really Free? The Complete Truth
“No Cost EMI” has become one of the most popular marketing phrases in Indian e-commerce and retail. Amazon, Flipkart, Samsung, Apple resellers, and thousands of merchants offer No Cost EMI across credit and debit cards. But is it truly free? The answer is nuanced — and understanding it can save you significant money.
How No Cost EMI Actually Works
In a genuine No Cost EMI arrangement, the merchant pays the interest to the bank on your behalf. The bank receives their interest; the merchant absorbs this as a customer acquisition cost or marketing expense. This is legitimate and truly free for you as a consumer — the price on the product remains the same whether you pay full or EMI.
The Hidden No Cost EMI Trick – Bank Cashback
In many No Cost EMI offers, the bank charges normal interest on your card but gives you a cashback equal to the interest amount. This appears in your statement as “EMI interest refund” or “cashback.” Effectively free — but technically, your credit limit is impacted during the tenure, and the cashback timing may differ from the interest charging timing.
When No Cost EMI Has a Hidden Cost
- Product price inflation: Some sellers show a higher MRP for the EMI version and discount it to normal price for full payment. You are paying the “interest” upfront in the inflated product price.
- Instant discount removed: Many products have an instant bank discount (5%–10%) if paid in full. This discount is often not available on No Cost EMI. If you choose NCE, you lose the instant discount — which can be more than the interest cost.
- GST on processing fee: Even in No Cost EMI, banks often charge a one-time processing fee (₹99–299 + 18% GST). This is a real cost.
- Debit card NCE restrictions: Debit card No Cost EMI often has more restrictions and fewer offers than credit card NCE.
Tips to Reduce Credit Card EMI Cost in India
1. Always Choose the Shortest Affordable Tenure
The total interest you pay is directly proportional to tenure. A ₹50,000 purchase at 1.5%/month: 3-month total interest = ₹1,237; 12-month = ₹4,546; 24-month = ₹9,556. Choosing 3 months over 24 months saves ₹8,319 on a single transaction. If you can stretch your budget slightly, always pick a shorter tenure.
2. Use Your Highest-Reward Card for EMI Purchases
Reward points and cashback are typically earned on the full purchase amount even on EMI transactions. A card giving 5X reward points on EMI purchases means the reward value partially offsets the interest cost. Check your card’s specific reward policy — some cards exclude EMI from reward point accumulation.
3. Compare EMI with Personal Loan
For large purchases above ₹1–2 lakh, compare credit card EMI (18%–30% p.a.) with a personal loan (10.5%–14% p.a.). For amounts above ₹50,000 and tenure beyond 12 months, a personal loan is almost always cheaper than credit card EMI.
4. Pre-closure to Save Interest
Most credit card EMI plans allow pre-closure after a minimum number of EMIs (typically 3). If your cash flow improves mid-EMI, pre-close the remaining amount — you stop paying interest on the outstanding principal immediately. Check your bank’s pre-closure fee (some charge 3%–5% of outstanding principal).
5. Look for 0% Processing Fee Offers
Banks frequently waive the processing fee during festive seasons (Navratri, Diwali, Christmas) and special sale events. If the purchase is not urgent, wait for these offers — saving the processing fee of 1% on a ₹50,000 purchase saves ₹500 immediately.