Credit Card Interest (APR) Calculator
How is Annual Percentage Rate (APR) Calculated on Credit Cards?
Understanding how your credit card issuer calculates interest can help you manage your debt more effectively. Unlike simple loans where interest might be calculated monthly or annually, credit card interest is typically calculated on a daily basis. This process involves converting your Annual Percentage Rate (APR) into a Daily Periodic Rate (DPR).
Daily Periodic Rate (DPR) = APR / 365
Daily Interest Charge = Current Balance × DPR
Step-by-Step Calculation Logic
1. Determine the Daily Periodic Rate (DPR)
Your APR is an annual figure, but banks charge interest daily. To find out how much interest accumulates every single day, the bank divides your APR by 365 (some institutions use 360). For example, if your APR is 18.99%:
- 18.99% / 365 = 0.0520% (Daily Periodic Rate)
2. Calculate Daily Interest
Once the DPR is established, it is applied to your "Average Daily Balance" or your current outstanding balance at the end of the day. If you have a balance of $2,000:
- $2,000 × 0.000520 = $1.04 per day in interest.
3. Total Interest for the Billing Cycle
Finally, the bank multiplies the daily interest charge by the number of days in your billing cycle (usually 30 or 31 days). Continuing the example above for a 30-day month:
- $1.04 × 30 days = $31.20 total interest charged for the month.
What is the "Average Daily Balance"?
In reality, your balance fluctuates as you make purchases and payments throughout the month. Most credit card issuers use the Average Daily Balance Method. They track your balance at the end of every day, add all those balances together, and divide by the number of days in the cycle. This average is what the DPR is applied to.
Key Terms Defined
APR (Annual Percentage Rate): The yearly cost of borrowing funds, expressed as a percentage.
DPR (Daily Periodic Rate): The APR divided by 365, used to calculate daily interest accrual.
Grace Period: The time between the end of a billing cycle and the payment due date where no interest is charged if the balance is paid in full.
How to Lower Your Costs
Since interest is calculated daily, making payments earlier in the billing cycle reduces your average daily balance, thereby reducing the total interest charged.
Example: Paying $500 halfway through the month saves more interest than paying it on the due date.
Why Doesn't the Math Match My Statement Exactly?
If your manual calculation differs slightly from your statement, consider these factors:
- Compounding: Some issuers compound interest daily (adding yesterday's interest to today's principal), though most charge simple interest calculated daily and posted monthly.
- Different Days in Year: Some banks divide by 360 days (commercial standard) or 366 days in a leap year.
- Transaction Timing: The exact time a payment posts affects the average daily balance.