The minimum payment line on a credit card statement is the single most expensive number in personal finance. Banks designed it to be just high enough that defaults stay manageable, and just low enough that balances stay outstanding for years. Pay the minimum on a typical card balance, and you can spend two decades clearing a single year’s worth of charges, paying more in interest than the original purchases.
That said, there’s a narrower truth most personal-finance writing skips: there are specific situations where paying the minimum is the correct move, even when you could pay more.
How minimum payments are engineered
Federal regulations after the 2009 CARD Act require minimum payments to actually amortize the balance โ before that, some cards set minimums so low that paying the minimum could leave the balance growing despite your payments. Today, minimums are typically set at 1โ3% of the balance plus interest and fees, calibrated to clear a balance over roughly a decade. The bank’s profit-maximizing structure isn’t a 30-year payoff anymore, but it’s still designed to keep you in revolving credit as long as possible. The “minimum payment warning” that now appears on statements quantifies this: a $5,000 balance at minimum payments often costs $7,000โ$9,000 in interest before it’s gone.
Why paying only the minimum is usually a disaster
Compound interest at 22โ29% APR is the most expensive force in most household balance sheets. A dollar of credit card debt at 25% APR is the equivalent of a guaranteed-loss investment paying negative 25% โ there is virtually nothing else in personal finance that touches that. Paying the minimum while keeping money in low-yield savings, or worse, while continuing to charge new purchases, is mathematically equivalent to lighting cash on fire. The arithmetic doesn’t get gentler over time; it gets worse, because each month’s unpaid interest becomes the next month’s principal.
When paying the minimum is the right move
Three legitimate cases. First, when you’re in a temporary cash crunch and need liquidity for a rent payment or essential bill โ minimum payment now, aggressive payoff next month, is rational. Second, when you have a higher-interest debt you’re attacking first and the credit card is the lower-rate balance โ pay minimums on lower-rate debts while killing the highest. Third, during a 0% promotional period โ paying the minimum until the promo expires, then clearing the balance, is exactly what the math says to do. Outside these situations, paying the minimum is rarely optimal.
The behavioral trap
The minimum payment functions as an anchor. Most people pay slightly above it without calculating what they should pay. A useful reframe: ignore the minimum entirely and decide what you want the balance to be in 12 months. Work backward from there. The minimum is the bank’s preferred number, not yours.
The bottom line
Minimum payments are designed to keep you profitable to the bank, not to help you become debt-free. Use them strategically in narrow cases. Otherwise, set your own number and pay it.
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