How long will minimum payments really take?

Minimum payments shrink as your balance falls — stretching payoff into decades. See the real timeline, and how much an extra $25–$100 a month saves.

Run the numbers

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On minimums alone, this takes

Minimums payoff time: —
Interest on minimums: —
Try an extra $25–$100/mo →

A snapshot, not the whole story

This calculator assumes a single, frozen balance. In real life, you keep using the card — and every new purchase resets the clock. The Pay Down app tracks your actual balance across every card and recalculates your real payoff date after each statement, so the minimum-payment trap can't sneak up on you.

Your debt changes every month — the app tracks it automatically

A calculator gives you a snapshot. Pay Down connects to your bank and keeps the math current as your balance, statements, and due dates change.

  • Connects to your bank via Plaid — balances always up to date
  • Recalculates your true payoff date after every statement
  • Tracks your progress and alerts you when due dates approach
Get it on Google Play iOS coming soon

Understanding the minimum payment trap

Why minimums are designed to last

The minimum payment on a credit card is usually calculated as a small percentage of your balance — commonly around 2%, with a floor of $25 or so. That sounds reasonable until you notice the consequence: as your balance falls, the required payment falls right along with it. You never reach a fixed payment that steadily retires the debt. Instead, progress decelerates the closer you get, and the tail drags on for years.

This isn't an accident. A shrinking minimum keeps you paying interest for as long as possible while still feeling like you're "making your payment." It's legal, it's disclosed, and it's the single biggest reason credit card balances persist for decades.

When a balance never gets paid off

There's a threshold where minimum payments stop working entirely. If the minimum is close to the monthly interest charge, almost none of your payment touches principal — and the balance barely moves. On a large balance at a high APR, the math can produce a payoff timeline of 50, 60, or more years, which is functionally "never." When that happens, this calculator marks the line "still owing" so you can see it plainly.

A minimum payment isn't slow progress on your debt — past a certain point it's no progress at all. The trap is mathematical, not a matter of willpower.

The power of a little extra

Here's the hopeful flip side. Because extra payments go straight to principal — not split with interest — even a small fixed amount on top of the minimum changes the picture dramatically. An extra $50 a month on a typical balance can cut the payoff from decades to a few years and save thousands in interest. The reason is that a fixed extra payment doesn't shrink as the balance falls; it keeps pushing principal down at full strength the whole way.

Try a few numbers in the extra-payment field above. The jump from $0 to $25, and again from $25 to $100, is usually far bigger than people expect. That's the lever the Pay Down app helps you pull — it tracks your real balances and builds an extra-payment plan you can actually stick to.

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Frequently asked questions

How long does it take to pay off a credit card on minimum payments?

Far longer than most people expect — often 15 to 30 years, and on higher balances at high APRs, the balance may never be paid off at all. Because minimum payments shrink as the balance falls, progress slows to a crawl. This calculator shows the exact payoff time for your balance and APR.

Why do minimum payments take so long?

The minimum payment is usually about 2% of your balance (with a small floor like $25). As you pay down the balance, the required minimum drops too, so each payment chips away less principal. The result is a long tail where most of every payment goes to interest.

How much does paying a little extra save?

A surprising amount. Because extra payments go straight to principal, even $25–$100 more a month can cut years off the payoff and save thousands in interest. Enter an extra amount in the calculator to see the exact time and interest saved for your balance.

Can a credit card balance really never get paid off?

Yes. If the minimum payment is close to (or below) the monthly interest charge, the balance barely moves and effectively never reaches zero within a normal lifetime. The calculator flags this with a 'still owing' warning when it happens.

How is this different from the Pay Down app?

This calculator models one balance at one APR. The Pay Down app tracks all your cards, recalculates payoff projections as your real balances change every month, and helps you build and stick to an extra-payment plan that actually retires the debt.