The short answer: Enter the card as a debt with its current balance, monthly payment, APR, and due date. Review the estimated payoff, then check which paycheck can safely cover the payment.
A practical way to start
Use the latest balance
Start with the statement or current account balance, not a remembered estimate.
Enter the APR
Use the purchase APR that applies to the balance. Promotional and cash-advance balances may follow different rates.
Choose a repeatable payment
A slightly smaller payment made consistently can be more useful than an aggressive amount that creates new card use.
Track actual changes
Update the balance after payments and statements so the estimate stays grounded in real activity.
What the estimate means
The calculator gives a planning estimate based on the values entered. Actual card interest may accrue daily, statement timing can vary, and new purchases or fees change the result.
Snowball or avalanche order
Snowball targets the smallest balance first. Avalanche targets the highest APR. Run both ideas if needed, but keep all required minimum payments current.
Why paycheck timing belongs in the calculation
A monthly payment may look affordable while landing in an overloaded paycheck. Assigning the due date to a specific check shows whether the plan works before the payment is promised.
Keep the plan honest: Use real due dates and amounts. The tool can organize the information, but it does not move money, pay providers, or guarantee a result.
Frequently asked questions
How accurate is a credit card payoff calculator?
It is an estimate. Accuracy depends on correct inputs and whether the issuer's interest timing, fees, and new transactions match the assumptions.
Does paying twice a month reduce interest?
It may reduce the average balance sooner, but issuer posting rules matter. Confirm how payments are credited.
Can I save the card in the dashboard?
Yes. After building the initial plan, create or sign in to an account and save the debt for ongoing tracking.
Put the idea into your own numbers
Use the free Snowball Your Debt tools to turn the guide into a paycheck plan you can review and update.
Calculate your card payoffEducational information only. Results depend on the information entered and do not replace individualized financial, legal, credit, or tax advice.