Be Very
Afraid of Credit Cards Interest Rate
For all people shop around for the best rate, there are few
who have taken the time to sit down and add it all up. After
all, why would you bother? The answer is that understanding
just how interest rates work can help you see how important
small differences in rates and payment amounts can be.
Interest Rates Credit Cards are
Compounded.
It is important to remember that what you owe is compounded
– that means you pay interest on the interest you owe from the
month before.
That means if the monthly interest rate is 2%, you will be
paying 26.82% and not 24% per year. Charging interest monthly
instead of yearly is a trick to make it feel like you are
paying a very low price for your borrowing.
A Simple Thought To Experiment.
Here’s a question: would you rather have $1 million, or
$10,000 in a savings account earning 20% per year in compound
interest?
Well, let’s see how that $10,000 would grow. After 10 years:
$61,917. 20 years: $383,375. 30 years: $2,373,763. 40 years:
$91,004,381. 50 years: $563,475,143.
So after fifty years, you’d have over $500 million?! Well,
not so fast. Of course, you have to take inflation into account
– if we say inflation is 5%, then that money would have the
buying power that $10,732,859 does today. Still, that’s not a
bad return on your investment of $10,000, is it?
Do you see the power of compound interest, and the way the
credit card companies make their money (it’s also the way
pensions work, and the reason the prices of things seem to rise
massively as you get older). Be very, very afraid of compound
interest. Or, of course, you could start saving, and be very
glad of it…
Compound Interest Keeps Adding Up.
Let’s work through an example on a more real kind of scale.
Let’s say you have an average unpaid balance of $1,000 on a
card at 15% APR.
You will owe $150 in interest for the first year you borrow.
However, this amount is then added onto the balance, and
interest is charged on that. The second year, you’d owe another
$172.50, for a total of $1322.50. It goes on, with totals like
this: $1,520.88, $1,749, $2,011.35.
After just five years at 15%, you’d owe
double what you borrowed. And after 10 years, you’d owe four
times what you borrowed! Bet you weren’t expecting that.
If you let something like that carry on for long enough,
you’ll end up paying back that credit card for years
afterwards, paying back what you borrowed many times over and
still not clearing the debt.
Most people don’t work this out, and feel that the payments
must simply be their fault for spending too much money to begin
with.
One Percent of Difference.
One more thing. You might think there’s not that much
difference between a card that charges 15% APR and one that
charges 12% APR. Let’s see the difference the lower
rate would make to that $1,000 borrowed for five
years. Remember, after five years at 15%, you owed
$2,011.35.
At 12%: $1120, $1254.40, $1404.93, $1573.52… $1762.34 after
five years. So you’ve saved $249.01 from that 3% difference in
APR – in other words, you’ve paid almost 25% less interest.
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