You can calculate your monthly credit card payment by multiplying the monthly interest rate by the outstanding balance. The monthly rate can be obtained by dividing your APR by 12 for the number of months in a year. The simplest way to do that is using a credit card calculator.
Keep in mind that your monthly credit card payment can be any amount between the minimum set by your issuer and your entire balance. You also do not have to pay the same amount every month. You can find both your required minimum payment and the full balance on your monthly credit card statement. You can also find this information by logging in to your online account or contacting your card’s issuer.
How to Calculate Your Monthly Credit Card Payment
- Open a free credit card calculator.
- Fill in your card’s balance and APR.
- Choose the option for calculating the payments needed to pay off your credit card within a certain amount of time.
- Fill in the number of months until you want to have your card paid off.
- Click the “Calculate” button.
- Look at the results to see your monthly payment, as well as information about the amount of interest you’ll pay and how much you could save by increasing your monthly payments.
You can learn more about credit card payments on WalletHub.
This answer was first published on 11/01/22 and it was last updated on 08/31/23. For the most current information about a financial product, you should always check and confirm accuracy with the offering financial institution. Editorial and user-generated content is not provided, reviewed or endorsed by any company.
Important Disclosures
WalletHub Answers is a free service that helps consumers access financial information. Information on WalletHub Answers is provided “as is” and should not be considered financial, legal or investment advice. WalletHub is not a financial advisor, law firm, “lawyer referral service,” or a substitute for a financial advisor, attorney, or law firm. You may want to hire a professional before making any decision. WalletHub does not endorse any particular contributors and cannot guarantee the quality or reliability of any information posted. The helpfulness of a financial advisor's answer is not indicative of future advisor performance.
WalletHub members have a wealth of knowledge to share, and we encourage everyone to do so while respecting our
content guidelines. This question was posted by WalletHub. Please keep in mind that editorial and user-generated content on this page is not reviewed or otherwise endorsed by any financial institution. In addition, it is not a financial institution’s responsibility to ensure all posts and questions are answered.
Ad Disclosure: Certain offers that appear on this site originate from
paying advertisers, and this will be noted on an offer’s details page using the designation "Sponsored", where applicable. Advertising may impact how and where products appear on this site (including, for example, the order in which they appear). At WalletHub we try to present a wide array of offers, but our offers do not represent all financial services companies or products.