Your $5 Coffee Habit on a Carried Balance: The Real Annual Cost
Your $5 Coffee Habit on a Carried Balance: The Real Annual Cost
You didn't come here to be told to stop buying coffee. Good, because that's not what this is. Your morning cup is one of life's small, genuine pleasures, and no personal finance article should stand between you and it.
What is worth your attention is this: when you carry a credit card balance, that $5 coffee isn't really $5. It's $5 plus a quiet little interest charge that never shows up on the receipt. Understanding the true cost of small purchases on a credit card balance won't ruin your morning — but it might change what you reach for when the barista says "card or cash?"
The Rate Environment You're Swimming In
First, some context. The average credit card interest rate hit historic highs recently, sitting at 22.15% APR for accounts assessed interest as of May 2026 (Source: Federal Reserve Board, Consumer Credit - G.19, May 2026). And that's an average — the same card that offers 14.99% to an applicant with excellent credit can charge as high as 24.99% at the top of its advertised range (Source: Bankrate, Current Credit Card Interest Rates), so we'll use 24.99% APR as an illustrative rate throughout this article.
Meanwhile, 47% of credit card holders carried a balance at least once in the past 12 months rather than paying in full every month (Source: Federal Reserve, Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households in 2023). If you're in that group, every new purchase enters a high-interest environment the moment you make it.
The Maths on a Single $5 Coffee
Here's the scenario: you have a $5,000 existing balance on a card at 24.99% APR. You buy a coffee for $5. You don't pay it off — it gets folded into your carried balance. What does that $5 actually cost over six months?
The daily periodic rate on a 24.99% APR card is approximately 0.0685% (24.99% ÷ 365).
Applied to $5 over 180 days:
$5 × (1 + 0.000685)^180 − $5 ≈ $0.66 in interest
So that single $5 coffee, carried for six months, costs you $5.66. That's not catastrophic in isolation. But isolation is exactly the wrong way to look at it.
Now Scale It: A Year of Daily Coffees
You buy a coffee every day. That's 365 coffees, $1,825 in charges over the year. Each one enters your running balance and starts accruing interest.
A charge made on the 1st of January and still outstanding on the 31st of December accumulates a full year of interest:
$5 × (1 + 0.000685)^365 − $5 ≈ $1.42 per coffee
Charges made later in the year accumulate less — the one you buy on the 30th of December barely has time to generate any interest at all. Averaged across all 365 daily purchases, each $5 charge carries roughly $0.71 in interest by year-end.
Scaled to the full year:
- 365 coffees × $5 = $1,825 in charges
- Estimated interest allocated to those charges = approximately $259
- True annual cost of the coffee habit = roughly $2,084
That's your $5 cup of coffee costing closer to $5.71 per visit on average — a quiet 14% surcharge that never appears on your bank app's transaction list.
"I'll Just Put It on the Card"
Here's where the small purchase credit card interest conversation gets genuinely useful. The maths above isn't designed to make you feel bad about coffee. It's designed to make visible something that's normally invisible.
"I'll just put it on the card" is a sentence millions of people say every day without realising it contains a hidden variable. When you're paying your balance in full every month, the sentence is essentially neutral — you get the points, you pay the same price. But when you're carrying a balance, that sentence has a price tag attached to it that depends on your APR, the size of your existing balance, and how long the charge floats before it's paid off.
The point isn't abstinence. The point is awareness. Some purchases are worth putting on the card even with interest. Some aren't. You can't make that call if you can't see the number. For the bigger picture on how small, routine charges combine on a carried balance, see our guide to the true cost of everyday spending.
What Pay Down Shows You
This is exactly the kind of calculation that Pay Down surfaces automatically. Rather than leaving you to do the back-of-a-napkin maths on daily periodic rates, Pay Down shows you the true cost of carrying individual transactions — so you can see, in plain numbers, what "I'll put it on the card" actually means for your specific balance and APR.
Understanding the true cost of a coffee on a credit card balance doesn't mean ordering black coffee from the cheapest place in town. It means walking into every purchase with open eyes.
The coffee's still worth it. The invisible surcharge is worth knowing about.