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How Often Should You Pay Your Credit Card?
You're not limited to a single monthly payment. Smaller, more frequent payments can reduce your interest charges and provide other benefits.
Gregory Karp is a former NerdWallet writer and an expert in personal finance and credit cards. A journalist for more than 30 years, he has been a newspaper reporter and editor, authored two personal finance books and created the "Spending Smart" syndicated newspaper column. His awards include national recognition several times from the Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing.
Kenley Young directs daily credit cards coverage for NerdWallet. Previously, he was a homepage editor and digital content producer for Fox Sports, and before that a front page editor for Yahoo. He has decades of experience in digital and print media, including stints as a copy desk chief, a wire editor and a metro editor for the McClatchy newspaper chain.
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Paying your credit card bill when the monthly statement comes is a pillar of responsible credit card use. But you're not limited to a single monthly payment. Making smaller payments more often has benefits you may not realize. And all major credit card issuers allow you to make mid-cycle payments.
Below are several reasons to consider making smaller, more-frequent credit card bill payments before the due date — and one reason not to bother.
If you typically carry a balance on your credit card from one month to the next, then making multiple payments during each billing cycle can reduce your interest charges overall. That’s because interest accrues based on your average daily balance during the billing period. The lower you can keep the balance day by day, the less interest you pay.
That’s true even if you pay the same dollar amount over the month. So paying $200 three times during the month results in less interest charged than paying $600 once a month.
Paying in small chunks as money comes available might be a better fit for your household budget. A typical example would be making a credit card payment when you get paid from work, maybe weekly or biweekly.
That way, you get the money out of your possession so you’re not tempted to spend it elsewhere.
With many credit cards, you can also change your payment due date to one that lines up better with your household cash flow.
Relatedly, whenever you come into occasional money — like an income tax refund or gift cash — some of that windfall can go immediately to the credit card balance.
'Tricking' yourself into paying more
If you created a steady repayment plan for yourself, a quirk of the calendar means you’ll pay more overall if you pay more often. Say you’re paying $400 per month toward your credit card balance. Instead, try paying $100 per week.
Isn’t that the same thing? It would be if the year consisted of 12 months of four weeks each. But a year has 52 weeks. Paying $100 per week ($5,200 per year) instead of $400 per month ($4,800 per year) means you’ll pay an extra $400 annually toward debt.
Helping your credit scores
Chipping away at debt could help your credit.
How? Credit scoring models, such as broadly used FICO credit scores, like to see you using less of your available credit, called credit utilization.
When you make multiple payments in a month, you reduce the amount of credit you’re using compared with your credit limits — a favorable factor in scores.
Credit card information is usually reported to credit bureaus around your statement date. Paying before your statement is prepared can reduce the balance reported to the bureaus, which helps your utilization ratio in credit scoring.
That said, try not to overthink it. So-called hacks such as the "15/3" credit card trick vastly overstate what you can accomplish by manipulating the timing of your payments to land on specific days.
If you pay at least the minimum payment amount early in the month, and pay extra later, you’ll never be charged late fees, which can be $40 per infraction. (As of 2022. Late fees are regulated by the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.)
And when you never pay late, you reduce the risk of the card issuer reporting your tardiness to the credit bureaus. Paying late is one of the factors that can reduce your scores.
You might also find that making a mid-month minimum payment is a stress reliever. Whatever else comes up during the month, including forgetfulness, at least you won’t be late with your credit card payment. (Just be sure you don’t pay so early that the payment gets applied to the previous month's billing cycle.)
Clearing room to charge more
If you’re bumping up against your credit limit, making payments more than once a month will whittle down the balance, leaving headroom to charge more if you need it. Again, though, using a high percentage of your available credit hurts your credit rating.
Getting motivation
If you’re in debt, paying more frequently might give you a psychological boost as you see the balance dwindle more often. Repeatedly seeing that you're closer to becoming debt-free could provide additional motivation to continue.
When NOT to pay more frequently
If you always have the cash to pay off your credit card balance in full monthly and you have no plans to apply for credit soon, there’s little reason to make multiple payments in a month. That’s because issuers typically give paid-in-full accounts an interest-free grace period, which usually lasts until the next due date. So you’re not saving money on interest.
If this describes you, you’re a transactor who uses credit cards as a payment tool, not a debt tool. You’re taking all the good things a credit card provides — rewards, convenience and consumer protections — and avoiding the main downside, paying interest.
You can set your credit card bill to be paid automatically each month from a bank account and spend time on something more enjoyable than mid-month bill-paying.
Whether you want to pay less interest or earn more rewards, the right card's out there. Just answer a few questions and we'll narrow the search for you.