The short answer: Card interest usually comes from a daily periodic rate, the APR divided by 365, applied to your balance each day, so reducing principal sooner and paying more than the minimum both cut the cost.
A practical way to start
Find your APR
Locate the purchase APR on your statement. Other balances may use different rates.
Convert to a daily rate
Many issuers divide the APR by 365 to get a daily periodic rate.
See it applied daily
That daily rate is charged on your balance each day, so interest can compound within a cycle.
Reduce principal to cut cost
Paying more, and sooner, lowers the balance the daily rate is charged on.
APR and the daily periodic rate
The APR is the yearly rate, but most cards charge interest daily. Dividing the APR by 365 gives a daily periodic rate that is applied to your balance each day of the cycle. Because each day's interest can be added to the balance, interest can compound within the month. The exact method varies by issuer, so your statement is the source of truth.
Why carrying a balance is costly
When you pay in full by the due date, most cards charge no interest on purchases thanks to the grace period. Once you carry a balance, that grace period can disappear and interest starts accruing on new purchases too. That is what makes a carried balance expensive beyond the stated rate.
Why minimum payments are slow
A minimum payment is designed to be small, so a large share of it can go to interest early on, leaving little to reduce principal. Since the daily rate is charged on principal, slow principal reduction means slow progress. Paying a fixed amount above the minimum sends more toward principal and shortens the timeline.
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 is credit card interest calculated?
Most issuers divide the APR by 365 to get a daily periodic rate and apply it to your balance each day, so interest can compound within a cycle.
Does paying in full avoid interest?
On purchases, paying the full statement balance by the due date usually avoids interest thanks to the grace period. Cash advances often have no grace period.
Why do minimum payments barely reduce my balance?
A large share of an early minimum payment can go to interest, leaving little for principal. Paying more than the minimum speeds up principal reduction.
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.
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