{"title":"What Is APR? How Credit Card Interest Really Works","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/credit-score/what-is-apr","category":{"slug":"credit-score","name":"Credit Score"},"creator":{"name":"ProudMoney - Credit Cards & Personal Finance","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDdVWGejfB3_M57sWv3yniQ","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1P5A1bA4QFw"},"tldr":"What is APR on a credit card? Learn how the yearly rate becomes a daily charge and the one habit that keeps your credit card interest at zero.","totalDurationSeconds":733,"difficulty":"easy","tools":[],"materials":[],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: What APR Actually Is","text":"APR is the price of borrowing money on your card, written as a yearly percentage. You will find it on your statement and in your card agreement. Many cards list more than one: a purchase APR, a higher cash-advance APR, and a penalty APR if you miss payments.The key thing to understand is that APR only matters when you carry a balance from one month to the next. On a statement where you paid everything off, the interest charged line reads zero, no matter how high the APR is."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: The Grace Period Is Your Free Pass","text":"Every credit card gives you a grace period: a stretch of time where no interest is charged as long as you pay everything you owe by the due date. Pay your full statement balance on time and you borrowed the card company's money for free that month.This is the single most important idea about APR. The rate is high on purpose, but it is designed to be avoidable. The grace period is the door, and paying in full is the key."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: What 'Revolving a Balance' Means","text":"If you do not pay the full amount, the leftover balance gets 'revolved' to the next billing cycle. That is the moment your grace period ends and interest starts.Once you are revolving a balance, the card charges interest on what you owe, and it keeps charging until you are back to zero. That is when the APR finally bites, and it is why even a small unpaid balance is worth clearing fast."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Turn the Yearly Rate Into a Monthly One","text":"To picture what an APR really costs, divide it by 12 for a rough monthly rate. A 24% APR is about 2% a month, an 18% APR is about 1.5%, and a 12% APR is about 1%.So on a $1,000 balance at 24% APR, you are looking at roughly $20 in interest for the month. Seeing it as a monthly number makes the cost feel real in a way the big yearly percentage never does."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: The Card Charges Interest Daily","text":"Here is the precise version. The card takes your APR and divides it by 365 to get a daily rate. A 24% APR works out to about 0.06575% per day.Each day you carry a balance, that daily rate is applied. On $1,000, that is about 66 cents a day, which adds up to roughly $20 over a month. Interest is quietly accruing every single day, not in one lump at the end."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Average Daily Balance Is the Real Math","text":"Because your balance changes during the month as you spend and pay, the card uses your average daily balance. It adds up what you owed each day of the cycle and divides by the number of days.Then it applies the daily rate to that average. In the example, an average daily balance of about $1,091 over 31 days comes out to around $22 in interest. Knowing this is enough to see why one habit beats all the math: pay the full statement balance every month and the whole calculation lands on zero."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-06-18T16:39:24.960Z","published":"2026-06-18T16:36:57.693Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}