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Hoots : Allowed roommate to make a purchase on my credit card. How do I calculate her interest? On Nov 5th my roommate had a medical emergency for her cat. The bill totaled 97.46. I was with her, and we put the bill on my credit - freshhoot.com

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Allowed roommate to make a purchase on my credit card. How do I calculate her interest?
On Nov 5th my roommate had a medical emergency for her cat. The bill totaled 97.46. I was with her, and we put the bill on my credit card with the understanding she would pay it back, including any interest incurred on her balance.

She made her first payment on January 13th of 0. Interest was building from the time of purchase; my interest rate is 19.97% annually (0.05456% daily rate). She agreed to pay all interest for her charges. I use this card often, and my own monthly balance varies.

How do I calculate her share of the interest monthly? I understand interest is charged from the purchase date. What would the math be to calculate it monthly so I can keep track and provide her with updates? It can't be as simple as the balance x the daily % rate = interest accumulated, can it? I'm horrible with numbers.

Thank you.


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The daily rate times 30 is 1.6368. I'd round this to 1.6%/month, and call it a day. 97 plus 3.2% of 1097 (.10 interest) is 32.10. (because it was 2 months)
After the payment, I'd call it 32. No need to track the cents. From then on, it's just the 1.6%/mo. Add the interest, the take off the payment.

This is a friend, right? Do we really charge friends to the penny?


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First, it is important to note that when you are carrying a balance from one month to the next, you lose your grace period; that is, you are paying interest on your new purchases beginning on the day of the purchase. You stated that interest charges have been accruing from the date of purchase, so I'm assuming that you were already carrying a balance/paying interest charges before this purchase happened. Keep in mind that you will continue to be operating without a grace period until the entire balance is completely paid down to [CO].

Now, to your question: Credit card interest is generally compounded daily. So if you want to compute this accurately, you need to figure out how many days you are being charged interest. The formula for compound interest is:

where P is the principal (97.46), r is the daily interest rate as a decimal (0.0005456), and n is the number of days you are charging interest.

From November 5 to January 13 (the date of her first payment), there are 69 days. Plugging those numbers into the above formula, your roommate's accumulated interest on January 13 before she made her payment was .09, and her balance was up to 39.55. She then paid you 0, making her new balance 39.55.

The next time she makes a payment, you can calculate her balance again. For example, let's say that she pays you 0 again on February 13, 31 days from her last payment. Plugging those numbers into the formula (P=1039.55, n=31), her balance before the payment is 57.28, and after her 0 payment it is 7.28.

If she continues making monthly 0 payments on the 13th of every month, I estimate that she will have her balance paid in full on January 13, 2018. Her last payment will only need to be about , and she will have paid a total of 52 by that time, which includes about 4 in total interest.


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