CreditCardCalcs
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Credit Card Interest at 0% APR

What a 0% APR actually costs on a $5,000 balance — the monthly interest, how long payoff takes at common payments, and how to lower your rate.

First-month interest on $5,000

$0/mo

$5,000 × 0% ÷ 12 months

Daily interest

$0/day

Most cards compound on the average daily balance.

Payoff at 0% APR (on a $5,000 balance)

Monthly paymentTime to pay offTotal interest
$100/mo4.2 yrs$0
$150/mo2.8 yrs$0
$200/mo2.1 yrs$0
$300/mo1.4 yrs$0
$500/mo0.8 yrs$0

Model your own balance at 0% APR

Months to pay off

25

Years2.1
Total interest$0
Total paid$5,000

Pay double the minimum to typically cut payoff time by half.

How to lower a 0% APR

See the full step-by-step in How to Get a Lower APR on Your Credit Card.

FAQ

How much interest does 0% APR cost per month on $5,000?

At 0% APR there is no interest charge — every dollar you pay reduces the principal. This is the case during a 0% promotional balance-transfer or purchase period.

How long does it take to pay off $5,000 at 0% APR?

At 0% APR, payoff time is simply balance ÷ payment. Paying $200/month clears $5,000 in 2.1 years with no interest.

Is 0% a good APR for a credit card?

0% is below the US average credit-card APR (roughly 21–24% in 2026), so it is a relatively good rate. Cardholders with strong credit and credit-union cards often land in this range.

How can I lower a 0% APR?

Three common paths: call your issuer and ask for a rate reduction (about 30% of people who ask get 2–8 points off), move the balance to a 0% promotional balance-transfer card if your credit qualifies, or — on variable-rate cards — your APR falls automatically when the prime rate drops.

Interest at other APRs

👉 Know your balance instead? See payoff plans by balance or use the payoff calculator.

Note: Figures assume a fixed 0% APR and fixed monthly payments on a $5,000 balance, for illustration only. Real cards compound interest daily, recalculate the minimum payment each cycle, and may add fees — your actual cost will differ.