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Calculators

Best Credit Calculator Tools

Free, plain-English calculators for the questions that actually move your credit score. We're building them now — here's what's coming.

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Credit Card Minimum Payment Calculator

See how long minimum payments will keep you in debt, how much interest you'll really pay, and what changes if you add even $25 a month. Statement-style estimate. No signup.

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Debt Snowball vs Avalanche Calculator

Add every debt, set your monthly budget, and compare both payoff methods honestly. See your debt-free date, total interest, and which debt to attack first. No signup.

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Credit Score Simulator

Test real credit moves — pay down a card, miss a payment, open a new account — and see the estimated score impact for FICO Score 8 or VantageScore 3.0. Educational only. No signup, no credit pull.

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Debt Through the Years

Watch average U.S. credit card and personal loan balances climb from 2015 to 2025, then compare your debt to the average and see your main paths to pay it down. Animated, illustrative, judgment-free.

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Minimum payment warning — explained

What the minimum payment warning on your statement really means

Federal law requires every credit card statement to show how long payoff takes if you only pay the minimum. Here's a plain-English answer to the questions people ask most.

What does the minimum payment warning on my statement actually mean?

It's a federally required estimate showing how long it would take to pay off your balance if you only paid the minimum each month and added no new charges. For most cards, that's 15 to 30+ years on a typical balance.

Is the minimum payment warning estimate accurate?

It's close, but it assumes no new charges, no fees, no APR changes, and the issuer's current formula. Real statements vary as the balance, APR, and minimum formula change month to month. Use a calculator to model your specific numbers.

Why is paying the minimum so expensive?

On most credit cards, almost the entire minimum payment goes to interest in the first months. Very little touches the principal, so the balance barely moves while you pay hundreds or thousands in interest over time.

How much extra should I pay above the minimum?

Even $25 to $50 above the minimum cuts months or years off payoff and saves hundreds in interest because every extra dollar goes straight to principal. Use the calculator to see your exact numbers.

Will the minimum payment warning hurt my credit score?

The warning itself does not affect your score — it is informational only. What hurts your score is high credit utilization caused by carrying a large balance, not the warning text.

Does my minimum payment go down when my balance goes down?

Yes, on most cards. As the balance shrinks, the percentage-based minimum shrinks too. That's why paying only the minimum keeps you in debt so long — the payment gets smaller every month.

7-step payoff playbook

How to escape the minimum payment trap

The exact steps to stop paying only the minimum, accelerate payoff, and minimize total interest. Most people finish this in under 15 minutes.

  1. 1

    Find your minimum payment formula

    Open your latest statement or cardholder agreement and locate 'How Your Minimum Payment Is Calculated.' Most major US issuers use interest + 1% of principal, a flat 2%–3% of the balance, or a fixed $25–$35 floor.

  2. 2

    Enter real numbers into the calculator

    Type your current balance, APR, and the formula your issuer uses. The live summary shows how much of the next minimum payment goes to interest versus principal.

  3. 3

    Read the minimum payment warning

    Look at the total time and interest cost of paying only the minimum, plus the fixed monthly payment needed to be debt-free in 12, 24, or 36 months.

  4. 4

    Test a small extra payment

    Add $25, $50, or $100 above the minimum. Watch the payoff timeline shorten and total interest drop. Compare side-by-side scenario cards to see time saved and interest saved.

  5. 5

    Stop adding new charges

    Pausing new charges on the card is usually the single biggest accelerator. Even one extra purchase per month can offset your extra payment.

  6. 6

    Lock in a fixed monthly payment

    Pick a flat dollar amount you can sustain — even your current starting minimum — and pay that every month instead of letting the minimum shrink with the balance.

  7. 7

    Verify the month-by-month schedule

    Open the payoff schedule to confirm each month's interest, principal, and remaining balance. Switch between minimum-only and your chosen pay-more scenario to compare.

Run the numbers on your balance

Coming soon

Credit utilization calculator

See exactly how paying down a card moves your credit utilization — the #2 factor in your FICO score.

Score impact estimator

Estimate how a new hard inquiry, paid-off collection, or maxed card could move your score.

Balance-transfer break-even

Will the balance-transfer fee actually save you money? Get the number in 10 seconds.

In the meantime

Use these guides to make smarter credit decisions today.

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