How Are Credit Card Minimum Payments Calculated?
Quick Answer
A credit card minimum payment is typically calculated as a percentage of your statement balance. Some lenders charge a percentage of your balance, while others factor in interest and other fees. And in other cases, you may only be charged a flat monthly payment, such as $35.

If you've noticed your credit card minimum payment fluctuates every month, it's by design. A minimum payment is primarily calculated based on your current balance, but will also include interest, fees, overlimit amounts or installment plan payments. Every credit card issuer uses its own formula, so your minimum payment can vary slightly from one card to another, even with similar balances.
What Is a Minimum Payment on a Credit Card?
A credit card minimum payment is the smallest amount you must pay by the due date to keep your account in good standing and avoid late fees or penalties.
Unless your minimum payment covers your full credit balance, or you have a 0% promotional annual percentage rate (APR), you'll pay interest on any unpaid balance. The minimum payment is generally designed to pay off a percentage of your balance, plus any interest, fees or past due amounts from your previous statement.
How Are Credit Card Minimum Payments Calculated?
Many card issuers take a layered approach to calculating your minimum payment. The calculation often starts with the greater of a fixed dollar amount or a percentage of your balance, then adds other charges depending on your account activity.
1. Start With a Base Amount
Your credit card's minimum payment is usually calculated using either a flat percentage of your balance or a percentage plus the cost of interest and fees.
If your card issuer uses the flat percentage method, you'll likely pay between 2% and 4% of your total balance. Any interest and fees you may need to pay will be subtracted from the total percentage calculated.
Issuers that use the alternative method may use a lower percentage of your balance—typically around 1%—and then charge you fees and interest on top of that amount.
There may be times when your balance is under a specified threshold. In these cases, your card issuer will make your minimum payment a flat amount, such as $25 or $35. If your balance is lower than that flat payment amount, though, you will be asked to pay your full balance.
Example: If your balance is $700 and your card's minimum payment is the greater of 2% or $25, you'd owe $25 since 2% of $700 is $14.
2. Add Past-Due, Overlimit and Installment Plan Amounts
Some credit card issuers start their calculation with any past-due balance, overlimit amounts or installment plan payments. Then they add the base minimum payment to that amount.
Other issuers add these amounts along with any fees at the end, after the base payment has been calculated.
If your entire balance is tied to an installment plan, your minimum payment may be your installment plan amount for that month.
Example: If your balance is $700, you have a $50 past-due balance and your card's minimum payment is the greater of 2% or $25, your card issuer might calculate your minimum payment as $25 + $50 = $75.
3. Round and Finalize
Once your base amount, any interest and fees, and any special payments have been added together, the issuer may round your minimum payment up to the nearest dollar.
Tip: Check your credit card agreement to learn how your minimum payment is calculated.
How Do I Know How Much My Minimum Payment Is?
Each month, your card issuer prepares a credit card statement with your statement balance, minimum payment and payment due date.
You can find your minimum payment in a few places:
- On your latest paper or online credit card statement
- In your credit card app or online account
- By calling your credit card issuer
Tip: Check your credit card statement to learn the time it will take to pay off your balance with minimum-only payments and how to pay off your balance in three years.
Credit card payoff calculator
How Does Making Only the Minimum Payment Affect My Credit?
Paying at least the minimum by the due date helps you maintain a positive payment history, which is a key factor in your credit score. However, paying only the minimum keeps your balance and credit utilization ratio high and can limit your credit score improvement. Increasing your payment can help you pay off your balance faster, lower your credit utilization and raise your credit score.
Learn more: Should I Pay Off My Credit Card Balance in Full Or Over Time?
What Happens if You Miss a Credit Card Payment?
If you don't make at least your minimum payment by the due date, you could:
- Pay a late fee: If your minimum payment isn't made by the cutoff time on the due date, your card issuer will charge a late fee.
- Lose your grace period: Your unpaid balance and new purchases will start accruing interest right away.
- Have a credit report delinquency: Once your payment is 30 days late, it can be reported to the credit bureaus, which will damage your credit scores.
- Lose your credit rewards: You may forfeit rewards earned for a billing cycle with a missed payment.
- Lose a promotional rate: Your card issuer may cancel a 0% introductory rate and apply the regular APR to your balance.
- Trigger a penalty rate increase: The penalty APR, which will be higher than your standard APR, may be applied to new purchases.
How to Pay Off Credit Card Debt Fast
Paying only the minimum keeps you current on payments, but also keeps you in debt longer. Here are some tips for paying off balance faster:
- Pay more than the minimum. Even a small monthly increase helps you reduce your balance faster and save money on interest.
- Make more frequent payments. Making multiple payments in a month can lower your monthly finance charges.
- Review your budget. Look for areas to cut back and redirect that money to your credit card balance to shave time off repayment.
- Consider a balance transfer card. A 0% introductory APR eliminates interest so your full payment is applied to your credit card balance.
- Consolidate your balances. Combining high-interest balances with a debt consolidation loan can help you lower your interest rate and pay off your debt in a set timeframe.
- Bring in more money. Asking for a raise, working overtime or finding a part-time gig can help bring in the extra cash you need to pay down your credit card balances.
Learn more: How to Pay Off Credit Card Debt
The Bottom Line
The minimum payment is calculated a little differently between credit card issuers, but each formula ensures you cover interest, mandatory fees and a small part of your balance. The payment will also cover urgent obligations, like past-due amounts or installment plan payments.While paying just the minimum is a convenient way to keep your account in good standing, it's not a long-term repayment plan. Increasing your payment frees up your available credit and helps you pay off your balance in less time.
If you're on a debt payoff journey, keeping tabs on how all the moves your making impact your credit scores is important. You can start by checking your FICO® ScoreΘ and credit report for free from Experian. You'll get suggestions on other things you can do that could help improve your scores.
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LaToya Irby is a personal finance writer who works with consumer media outlets to help people navigate their money and credit. She’s been published and quoted extensively in USA Today, U.S. News and World Report, myFICO, Investopedia, The Balance and more.
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