Credit & Debt

0% Credit Card Guide UK — Interest-Free Purchases and Balance Transfers

How to use 0% credit cards for purchases and balance transfers. Best deals, how they work, eligibility, and strategies to make the most of interest-free periods.

0% credit cards are powerful financial tools when used correctly. Whether you want to spread the cost of a large purchase interest-free or move existing debt to pay it off without interest charges, understanding how these cards work is essential to making them work for you.

Types of 0% Card

0% Purchase Cards

Feature Detail
0% period 6–24 months
What’s interest-free New purchases made on the card
After 0% period Standard rate applies (19–25% APR)
Best for Large planned purchases (appliances, furniture, technology)

0% Balance Transfer Cards

Feature Detail
0% period 12–30 months
What’s interest-free Debt moved from another credit card
Transfer fee 0–3.5% of amount transferred
After 0% period Standard rate applies
Best for Paying off existing credit card debt

See our detailed balance transfer guide for more.

Combined Cards (0% Purchases + 0% Balance Transfer)

Feature Detail
0% purchase period Usually shorter (6–18 months)
0% transfer period Usually shorter than dedicated transfer cards
Best for Moving debt AND needing to make a large purchase
Trade-off Shorter 0% periods than dedicated cards

How to Use 0% Purchase Cards Effectively

The Strategy

  1. Plan your purchase before applying for the card
  2. Check eligibility using a soft search checker
  3. Apply for the card with the longest 0% period you qualify for
  4. Make the purchase on the new card
  5. Divide the total by the number of 0% months — this is your monthly payment
  6. Set up a direct debit or standing order for this amount
  7. Clear the balance before the 0% period ends

Example: £1,200 Purchase on 18-Month 0% Card

Month Payment Remaining Balance Interest
1–18 £66.67 Decreasing to £0 £0
Total paid £1,200 £0

Compare to a standard credit card at 22% APR with minimum payments: total paid = £1,450+

Avoiding the Traps

Trap How to Avoid
Only paying minimums Set up a payment to clear within 0% period
Forgetting the end date Set a calendar reminder 2 months before
Spending more than planned Only buy what you originally planned
Cash withdrawals Never withdraw cash — interest is charged immediately
Missing a payment Set up a direct debit for at least the minimum
Not checking the rate after 0% Know what the standard APR is

Eligibility

Factor Impact
Credit score (good-excellent) Required for the best 0% deals
Income Must demonstrate ability to repay
Existing credit Too much existing credit can reduce chances
Recent applications Multiple applications reduce chances
Electoral roll Being registered improves chances

Improving Your Chances

  1. Check your credit score before applying
  2. Use eligibility checkers (soft search — no impact on credit)
  3. Apply for only one card at a time
  4. Ensure you are on the electoral roll
  5. If declined, wait 3–6 months before reapplying

0% Cards vs Other Borrowing

Feature 0% Credit Card Personal Loan BNPL
Interest cost £0 during promo Fixed rate throughout Usually £0
Discipline needed High (must clear before end) Low (fixed payments) Medium
Credit check Yes Yes Varies
Builds credit history Yes Yes Usually not (yet)
Consumer protection Section 75 (purchases £100+) Limited Limited
Flexibility High Fixed payments Fixed schedule

Section 75 Protection

A major advantage of credit cards: Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act protects purchases between £100 and £30,000. If goods are faulty, not delivered, or the company goes bust, your card provider is equally liable.

This applies even if you only pay part of the purchase on the credit card (e.g. £1 deposit on a £500 item).

After the 0% Period

If you have not cleared the balance:

  1. Apply for a new 0% card and transfer the remaining balance
  2. Pay off as much as possible before the standard rate applies
  3. Do not ignore it — 22% APR on a remaining balance adds up quickly

For broader debt management, see our debt repayment strategies and borrowing options guide.