Balance Transfer Calculator

Compare the cost of keeping your current credit card vs transferring to a 0% intro APR card. Calculate savings including transfer fees and post-promo interest.

About the Balance Transfer Calculator

A balance transfer moves existing credit card debt to a new card with a lower interest rate — often 0% APR for an introductory period of 12-21 months. While this sounds like free money, there is always a balance transfer fee (typically 3-5%) and a revert rate that kicks in after the promo period. The real question is whether the savings from reduced interest outweigh the upfront fee.

The Balance Transfer Calculator compares your current card's total cost against a transfer card's total cost, including the transfer fee, promo-period interest (usually $0), and post-promo interest if you do not pay off the balance in time. It shows your net savings or loss so you can make a data-driven decision.

This tool is essential for anyone carrying high-rate credit card debt and considering a balance transfer offer. Even when the answer seems obvious, the numbers can surprise you — especially when the promo period is short or the transfer fee is high.

Why Use This Balance Transfer Calculator?

Balance transfer offers flood your mailbox and inbox, but not all are created equal. A 3% fee on a $10,000 balance is $300 — which may or may not be worth it depending on how quickly you can pay off the debt and what the revert rate is. This calculator eliminates guesswork by modeling both scenarios side by side and accounting for every dollar.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your current card balance and APR.
  2. Enter the balance transfer card's promo APR (typically 0%), promo period length, and transfer fee percentage.
  3. Enter the transfer card's regular APR after the promo period ends.
  4. Set the monthly payment you plan to make on the debt.
  5. Review the side-by-side comparison of total interest, fees, and overall cost for each option.
  6. Adjust your monthly payment to see if you can pay off the balance before the promo expires.

Formula

Current card cost: simulate monthly interest at current APR until paid off. Transfer card cost: Transfer fee (Balance × Fee%) + $0 interest during promo + Post-promo interest (remaining balance at revert APR until paid off). Net savings = Current total cost − Transfer total cost.

Example Calculation

Result: Net savings of $1,185 with balance transfer

Keeping the $8,000 balance on the current 22% APR card at $500/month costs $1,425 in interest over 18 months. Transferring to a 0% promo card for 15 months costs $240 in transfer fees (3% × $8,000) plus $0 promo-period interest. At $500/month you pay off $7,500 during the promo, leaving $500 at the 24% revert rate, which costs about $10 more in interest. Total transfer cost: $250 vs $1,425 — saving $1,185.

Tips & Best Practices

When Balance Transfers Make Sense

Balance transfers are most valuable when you have high-rate debt, a solid plan to pay it off during the promo period, and the discipline to avoid new charges. The ideal scenario is transferring a balance you can eliminate within 12-18 months at 0% APR while paying only a 3% fee.

The Hidden Costs

Beyond the transfer fee, watch for: annual fees on the new card, loss of rewards on payments shifted away from rewards cards, deferred interest clauses, and the temptation to spend on the newly freed-up credit line. A balance transfer saves money only if you use it as a payoff accelerator, not a breathing room to add more debt.

Optimal Strategy

Divide your balance by the number of promo months to calculate the required monthly payment. Set up autopay for that amount. Do not use the new card for purchases. Do not close the old card. Monitor your balance to ensure you will finish before the promo expires.

Multiple Transfers

Some people do serial balance transfers — moving remaining debt to a new 0% card before the first promo expires. While this can work, each application adds a hard inquiry and transfer fee. It is better to commit to paying off the balance within one promo period if possible.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a balance transfer always worth it?

No. If the transfer fee is high, the promo period is short, and your payment is low, you may end up paying more than if you stayed on the current card — especially if the revert rate is higher than your current APR. Always run the numbers with this calculator before deciding.

What happens if I do not pay off the balance during the promo period?

The remaining balance begins accruing interest at the card's regular (revert) APR, which is often 20-26%. Some cards even retroactively charge interest on the original transfer amount (deferred interest), though this is less common with standard balance transfer offers. Read the fine print carefully.

Can I transfer a balance between cards from the same bank?

Generally no. Most banks do not allow balance transfers between their own cards. You need to transfer to a card from a different issuer. Check the offer terms for any restrictions on eligible balances.

Does a balance transfer affect my credit score?

Opening a new card triggers a hard inquiry (small temporary dip) and increases your total available credit. If you do not close the old card, your overall credit utilization drops, which can actually improve your score. The net effect is usually neutral to slightly positive within a few months.

How is the transfer fee calculated?

The fee is typically a percentage of the transferred amount (3-5%), with a minimum of $5-$10. For an $8,000 transfer at 3%, the fee is $240. This fee is usually added to your new card balance, so your starting balance is $8,240. Some premium offers waive the fee entirely.

Can I do multiple balance transfers?

Yes, you can transfer balances from multiple cards to one new card, up to the new card's credit limit. The transfer fee applies to each transfer. Consolidating multiple high-rate balances onto one 0% card can simplify payments and save significant interest.

What is deferred interest vs waived interest?

Waived interest means you pay no interest during the promo period regardless of whether you pay off the balance. Deferred interest means if you do not pay the full balance by the promo deadline, you owe all the interest that would have accrued from day one. Most balance transfer cards use waived interest, but confirm before applying.

Should I transfer to a 0% card or get a personal loan?

A 0% balance transfer is usually cheaper for shorter timelines (12-18 months) if you can pay off the balance in time. A personal loan (typically 7-15% APR) is better for larger balances that need more time, since the rate is fixed and there is no cliff when a promo expires. Compare total costs for both using our calculators.

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