How Credit Cards Work UK 2026 — Beginner's Complete Guide

Credit Card Interest and APR Explained UK

How credit card interest works, what APR really means, how interest is calculated, and strategies to minimise what you pay.

Credit card information is for educational purposes only. Credit products are regulated by the FCA. Always check terms and eligibility before applying. If you're struggling with credit card debt, free help is available from StepChange.

If you are learning how cards work and want a complete route through applications, costs, and repayment strategy, use the Credit Card Basics Hub as your main guide.

Credit card interest can be expensive if you don’t understand how it works. Knowing when interest applies — and how to avoid it — can save you hundreds or thousands of pounds.

How Credit Card Interest Works

ScenarioDo You Pay Interest?
Pay full balance by due dateNo
Pay less than full balanceYes — on the remaining amount
Cash withdrawalYes — from day 1
Balance transferDepends on promotional rate
Carry any balance from last monthOften yes — even on new purchases

Understanding APR

What APR Includes

ComponentIncluded in APR?
Interest rateYes
Annual feeYes (if applicable)
Cash advance feesNo (charged separately)
Late payment feesNo
Foreign transaction feesNo

Types of APR

APR TypeWhat It Applies ToTypical Range
Purchase APRNormal card spending18%–30%
Cash APRATM withdrawals, cash-like transactions25%–35%
Balance transfer APRTransferred debt0% promo or 18%–30%
Default APRAfter missed paymentsCan be higher

Representative APR

What It MeansReality
“24.9% APR Representative”Only 51% must be offered this rate
Your rate could differDepending on your credit score
Some get higher ratesUp to 10-15 percentage points more
Some get declinedDon’t get the card at all

How Interest Is Calculated

The Maths

StepCalculation
1. Daily interest rateAPR ÷ 365 = daily rate
2. Example: 24% APR24% ÷ 365 = 0.0658% per day
3. Interest per dayBalance × daily rate
4. Monthly interestSum of daily interest charges

Simplified Example

DayBalanceDaily RateInterest
1-30£1,0000.0658%£0.66/day
30 days total£1,000~£19.70 for the month

Note: Actual calculations are more complex, accounting for payments and purchases throughout the month.

The Interest-Free Period

How It Works

StageWhat Happens
You make a purchaseNo interest yet
Statement generatedShows what you owe
Due date (21-25 days later)Deadline for payment
Pay in fullNo interest charged — free borrowing
Don’t pay in fullInterest charged on remaining balance

Length of Interest-Free Period

Purchase DateStatementDue DateInterest-Free Days
Day after statementNext statement (30 days)25 days laterUp to 56 days
Day before statementThat statement25 days later~25 days

Maximum interest-free period: Typically 45-56 days (if you buy right after your statement date)

When You Lose It

ScenarioInterest-Free Period
Pay full balance every monthMaintained
Carry any balanceOften lost on new purchases too
Cash withdrawalNo interest-free period ever

Important: Once you carry a balance, new purchases may accrue interest from day 1 until you clear the balance completely.

Cash Withdrawals and Interest

FeatureCash Withdrawal
Interest startsImmediately (no grace period)
RateUsually higher than purchase APR
FeeTypically 3-5% of amount (minimum £3-5)
When to useNever unless emergency

Example: Cash Withdrawal Cost

AmountFee (3%)Interest (30 days at 27% APR)Total Cost
£100£3~£2.20£5.20 for 30 days
£500£15~£11£26 for 30 days

Minimum Payments and Interest

If you only pay the minimum:

BalanceAPRMonthly PaymentTime to ClearTotal Interest
£1,00022%Minimum (~£25)5 years~£500
£3,00022%Minimum (~£60)14 years~£2,600
£5,00022%Minimum (~£100)18 years~£5,000

The trap: Minimum payments are designed to keep you in debt for as long as possible.

Strategies to Minimise Interest

If You Pay in Full

StrategyBenefit
Always pay full balanceNever pay interest on purchases
Set up Direct Debit for full balanceCan’t accidentally miss
Don’t carry a balanceMaintain interest-free period

If You Carry a Balance

StrategyBenefit
Pay as much as possibleFaster payoff, less interest
Transfer to 0% balance transfer card0% interest while you pay off
Stop using the cardDon’t add to the problem
Prioritise high-interest debtPay this before lower-rate loans

General Strategies

StrategyBenefit
Never withdraw cashAvoid expensive cash APR
Avoid cash-like transactionsGambling, money orders, crypto
Check your rateKnow what you’re actually being charged
Look for 0% dealsIf you need to spread costs

Special Situations

0% Promotional Rates

FeatureDetail
How they work0% interest for a set period (typically 6-24 months)
After promo endsReverts to standard APR (often 20-30%)
Key riskIf not cleared in time, interest begins
StrategySet up payments to clear before 0% ends

Compound Interest

Most credit cards charge simple interest on the average daily balance, not compound interest. However, if you don’t pay, the balance increases and interest is then charged on the higher amount — which feels like compounding.

Interest on Interest-Free Purchases

Common MisconceptionReality
“This purchase is 0%, so my card has 0%”The 0% only applies to specific transactions
“I can pay for other purchases later”Other purchases may not be 0%
Which gets paid first?Usually highest-interest debt, but check terms

Key Takeaways

  1. Pay in full to never pay interest on purchases
  2. Never use for cash — expensive from day 1
  3. Don’t just pay minimums — debt trap
  4. Carrying a balance? Consider 0% balance transfer
  5. Know your APR — check your actual rate, not advertised
  6. Set up Direct Debit for at least full balance

For help with existing debt, see our paying off credit card debt guide and balance transfer guide.

Sources

  1. FCA — Credit cards
  2. MoneyHelper — Credit cards