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Hoots : Credit Card Newbie - If I pay off my balance every month, what am I actually paying? So I have never owned a credit card in my life, and am trying to get ideas as to how they work. Sorry if this is too simple a question... - freshhoot.com

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Credit Card Newbie - If I pay off my balance every month, what am I actually paying?
So I have never owned a credit card in my life, and am trying to get ideas as to how they work. Sorry if this is too simple a question...

Lets say I have a credit card, and in one month I charge 00 to it. At the end of the month, if I want to pay off the balance, am I paying 00, or is there interest involved? Does it differ depending on the card?


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I don't agree with most of these answers. If my statement on Feb 28th says I owe 0.00 USD today, and it is due by March 10. and I pay that 0 before March 10th, when I get my card, the amount due will be the interest on the 0 charged from March 1 to March 10th. This is the way a big CCard Company - well the biggest - does their interest, and why I went ballistic when I figure it out. And that is why my statement this month says .86 and does not show [CO].00. So I have to pay off my amount due, plus an additional 10% - else I will never pay off my credit card - it will go on for ever, and ever......


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You pay a yearly fee for having the card (although you could have a free card).
Anybody that fails to pay the bill will pay a hefty interest rate.
The shopkeepers will pay between 1,5% and 4% (I think) to the credit card company.

You should be able to get a free card, as the companies make most (I guess) of their money with the high interest rates, and the commissions.


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That will depend on the terms of the credit card agreement, but I have never seen a credit card agreement where you would owe interest in the scenario you described. As long as you pay the balance in full by the due date each month you shouldn't be charged any interest.


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In general, it works like this. For ease of explanation, assume that the billing cycle is aligned on month boundaries, and have 10 days from the time you get the bill to when you have to pay. These numbers will vary by credit card, but the concept is the same.

Between Jan. 1 and Jan 31, you charge 00
On Jan 31, the January billing cycle ends
You charge an additional 0 on Feb 5, and nothing more for the rest of the month
On Feb. 10, you receive a bill for January, for 00, due on Feb. 20
On Feb. 20, you pay your bill of 00.
On Feb. 28, the February billing cycle ends
On March 10, you receive a bill for 0, due on March 20.

There would be no interest charged in this scenario. As long as you pay the total amount of each bill by the due date, there is no interest charge. Note that if you continuously charge on your card, it may never have a zero balance, even though you are paying your bill on time.


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For most cards, If the previous month you paid, by the due date, the total balance as of the billing date, then no interest is charged on purchases made that month if you pay the balance by the due date. (It must be the previous two months for some cards). See the answer by KeithB for an example of paying the total amount. The period for which you do not accrue interest is known as a grace period.

If you did not pay your balance in full by the end of the previous month, then interest starts accruing right away on new purchases. Cash advances and balance transfers normally start accruing interest right away regardless of whether your balance was paid in full (they don't have a merchant to charge a fee to, so they have to get paid from somewhere.)

The details vary from card to card, so you should read the terms of your card, and/or contact customer service to be certain.


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