As inflation continues biting American consumers, news headlines involving their personal finances have become more dire.Here’s an example that recently grabbed our attention:Nearly one-fifth of Americans have ‘maxed out’ their credit cards as inflation and high interest rates push delinquencies to 3-year highdepositphotos Analysts at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York report that result is heavily weighted toward younger Americans. They indicate around one out of six members of Generation Z face those financial straits, compared with one out of twenty members of the Baby Boom generation.Regardless of generation, it might be very helpful to know how long it would take you to pay off your credit card debt. That question can be answered with the personal finance formula known as the “Credit Card Equation, which we’ve built the following tool to do. Just enter the details of any credit card debt scenario you want to consider and it’ll tell you how long it will take to pay off that debt, assuming no additional debt is charged up on that credit card. [If you’re accessing this tool on a site that republishes our RSS news feed, please click through to our site to access a working version.]

Credit Card Debt and Payment Information Input Data Values Annual Percentage Rate (APR)   Balance Owed   Your Planned Monthly Payment  

 

Time Needed to Pay Off Your Credit Card Calculated Results Values Months to Fully Pay Off  

If you’re wondering about the default values in the tool, they are the figures we pulled from the following sources that were available as of 24 May 2024:

  • Bankrate Current Average Credit Card Interest Rate (Annual Percentage Rate)
  • Credit Karma’s State of Debt and Credit Report, January-March 2024. This report indicates the average credit card balance of 82.9 million Credit Karma members and the average size of their next planned payment.
  • Again with the assumption that no additional debt is charged to this “average” American credit card, the tool finds it will take 58 months to fully pay it down to a zero balance. Playing with the tool, we found that increasing the monthly payment by $20 can take eight months off that payoff period. Reducing the monthly payment to $180 however will extend the payoff time to 70 months.Don’t let us have all the fun! Go ahead and take it for your own test drive to work out whatever range of credit card payoff scenarios you want to consider.More By This Author:The S&P 500 Coasts Into Fifth Up Week Ahead Of Holiday WeekendTeen Jobs Dip In April 2024 Spring 2024 Snapshot Of The Future For S&P 500 Dividends