Quick Answer
Paying $225/month (about 3% of the balance) at a typical 20.99% APR pays off $7,500 in 4y 3m, with $3,851 in interest. Minimum payments alone would take about 62y 2m.
Payoff Results
Time to Pay Off
4y 3m
$225/month · 20.99% APR
Original Balance$7,500
Total Interest$3,851
Total Paid$11,351
Minimum-Only Timeline62y 2m
● Principal 66%● Interest 34%
Minimum payment modeled as the greater of $25 or 2% of the balance, recalculated monthly. Actual minimum payments vary by card issuer.
$7,500 Credit Card Debt: Payoff Time by Monthly Payment
Estimated at a 20.99% APR — the approximate US average for accounts that carry a balance. A bigger fixed payment dramatically shortens the payoff time and cuts total interest.
| Monthly Payment | Payoff Time | Total Interest |
|---|
| Minimum only | 62y 2m | $39,982 |
| $150/mo | 10 years | $10,459 |
| $225/mo | 4y 3m | $3,851 |
| $375/mo | 2y 1m | $1,811 |
| $600/mo | 1y 3m | $1,038 |
| $900/mo | 10 months | $678 |
Frequently Asked Questions
- How long will it take to pay off $7,500 in credit card debt?
- At a typical 20.99% APR, paying about $225/month (3% of the balance) pays off $7,500 in 4y 3m, with about $3,851 in interest. Making only minimum payments would stretch that out to roughly 62y 2m and cost $39,982 in interest instead.
- How much interest will I pay on this balance?
- Total interest depends entirely on your monthly payment — the table below shows total interest at several common payment levels for a $7,500 balance.
- Does paying only the minimum ever pay off the debt?
- Yes, eventually — but it can take 15-25+ years and cost more in interest than the original balance, because the required minimum payment shrinks as your balance drops, so less and less goes toward principal each month.
- Should I consolidate or transfer this credit card debt?
- A 0% intro APR balance transfer (typically 12-21 months, with a 3%-5% transfer fee) can eliminate interest entirely while you pay it down, if you can clear the balance within the promotional window. A personal loan consolidation can also lower your rate if your credit qualifies.