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When are you charged interest on a credit card


Credit cards charge interest on any balances that you don't pay by the due date each month. When you carry a balance from month to month, interest is accrued on a daily basis, based on what's called the Daily Periodic Rate (DPR). DPR is just another way of saying what your daily interest charge is.

How do you avoid paying interest on a credit card?

If you'd like to avoid paying interest on your credit card, you have two options. You can pay off your balance before your grace period ends, or you can apply for a zero-interest credit card that offers 0 percent APR on purchases for up to 21 months.

How does interest get charged on a credit card?

How Credit Card Interest Works. If you carry a balance on your credit card, the card company will multiply it each day by a daily interest rate and add that to what you owe. The daily rate is your annual interest rate (the APR) divided by 365. For example, if your card has an APR of 16%, the daily rate would be 0.044%.

Why am I being charged interest on my credit card after paying it off?

Residual interest, aka trailing interest, occurs when you carry a credit card balance from one month to the next. It builds up daily between the time your new statement is issued and the day your payment posts. Since it accrues after your billing period closes, you won't see it on your current statement.

Do I get charged interest if I pay the minimum?

However, if you only make the minimum payment on your credit cards, it will take you much longer to pay off your balances—sometimes by a factor of several years—and your credit card issuers will continue to charge you interest until your balance is paid in full.