Every credit card bill you receive contains two payment figures that look similar but carry very different financial consequences. One is your total outstanding amount, the full balance you owe. The other is your minimum amount due, the smallest payment the bank will accept to keep your account active. Most first-time credit card users assume that paying the minimum due is a normal, acceptable way to manage a credit card bill. It is not.
The minimum payment on a credit card is specifically designed to keep you in the bank's debt for as long as possible while generating interest income. Understanding exactly what happens when you pay only the minimum, the interest that accrues, the balance that barely moves, and the CIBIL score impact that builds silently, is one of the most important pieces of financial education available to an Indian credit card user. This guide covers all of it, with real examples and actionable steps to break the cycle.
How Is Credit Card Minimum Payment Calculated?
Minimum Payment Calculation Formula
Most Indian banks calculate the minimum amount due using one of the following methods, applying whichever produces the higher result:
- A fixed percentage of the total outstanding balance, most commonly 5% of the total amount due.
- A flat minimum amount, typically ₹200, applied when the outstanding balance is very small and 5% would produce a trivially low figure.
- Some banks also include any overlimit amount and any amount overdue from previous cycles in the minimum due calculation, in addition to the 5% or flat minimum.
The minimum amount due is not a repayment of your debt, it is a fee to keep your account in good standing for another billing cycle while the remaining balance continues to attract finance charges.
Example: How Minimum Due Is Calculated on Your Bill
Example: Your total outstanding balance is ₹40,000. Your bank applies a 5% minimum due calculation. Minimum Amount Due = 5% × ₹40,000 = ₹2,000. After paying ₹2,000, your remaining balance is ₹38,000. Interest at 3.5% per month (42% per annum) on ₹38,000 for the next 30 days = approximately ₹1,330. Your actual balance reduction after accounting for interest: only ₹670 of your ₹2,000 payment went toward reducing the principal. The remaining ₹1,330 went to the bank as interest.
Does Minimum Payment Change Every Month?
Yes. Since the minimum due is typically calculated as a percentage of the outstanding balance, it decreases slightly each month as you pay down the principal. However, if you continue using the card while paying only the minimum, new purchases are added to the outstanding, potentially increasing or sustaining the minimum due level. This is why relying on minimum payments while continuing to use the card is a spiral, the balance does not meaningfully decline.
What Happens If You Pay Only the Minimum Due?
Interest Is Charged on Entire Outstanding Balance
This is the most critical point to understand: when you pay only the minimum due, interest is charged on the entire remaining outstanding balance, not just the portion you did not pay. At an interest rate of 36%–42% per annum, this is among the most expensive forms of borrowing available to a consumer in India. Unlike a home loan or car loan where the interest reduces as you pay down the principal through EMIs, credit card revolving interest can grow faster than your minimum payments reduce the balance if you continue spending.
No Interest-Free Period on New Transactions
This consequence is less well-known but equally damaging. When you carry any unpaid balance from one cycle to the next, even ₹100, you lose the interest-free grace period on all new transactions. Every new purchase made on the card in the following billing cycle begins attracting interest from the date of the transaction, with no grace period whatsoever. This means even a ₹500 grocery purchase becomes an interest-bearing transaction the moment it is made, compounding your total interest burden.
How Revolving Balance Grows Over Time
A revolving balance, an unpaid credit card balance that is carried forward and accumulates interest, can grow faster than it is being paid down if minimum payments are insufficient to cover the monthly finance charge. At a 3.5% monthly interest rate, a ₹1,00,000 outstanding that you are paying only the minimum on (₹5,000 per month, declining) will take over 3.5 years to fully repay, and cost more than ₹80,000 in interest alone, in addition to the original principal. You will end up paying nearly double the original purchase value.
Example: True Cost of Paying Only Minimum Due
Scenario: Outstanding balance of ₹30,000. Bank charges 42% per annum (3.5% per month). Minimum due: 5% of outstanding. Month 1: You pay ₹1,500 (5% of ₹30,000). Interest on remaining ₹28,500: approximately ₹997. Net reduction in principal: only ₹503. After 12 months of only paying the minimum (no new purchases), your outstanding drops from ₹30,000 to approximately ₹25,000, but you have already paid over ₹16,600. Nearly 70% of every minimum payment went toward interest, not principal.
Charges on Unpaid Credit Card Balance
Interest Rate on Outstanding Balance After Minimum Payment
Interest on unpaid credit card balances in India is charged at rates that typically range from 30% to 48% per annum, which translates to 2.5%–4% per month. The exact rate depends on your card issuer and card type, and is specified in your card's Most Important Terms and Conditions (MITC) document. This rate is applied to the average daily balance of the unpaid amount from the statement date (or the transaction date, depending on the bank's policy) until the amount is fully cleared.
Late Payment Fee If Minimum Due Is Also Missed
If you fail to pay even the minimum amount due by the payment due date, the bank levies a late payment fee in addition to the finance charge on the outstanding. Late payment fees in India are typically tiered by outstanding amount:
- Outstanding up to ₹500: nil or ₹100
- ₹501 to ₹5,000: ₹100–₹500
- ₹5,001 to ₹10,000: ₹500–₹750
- ₹10,001 to ₹25,000: ₹750–₹950
- Above ₹25,000: ₹950–₹1,300
These are indicative ranges and vary by bank and card. Refer to your specific card's fee schedule for exact figures.
GST on Interest and Penalty Charges
GST at 18% is applicable on all finance charges (interest), late payment fees, and other credit card service charges. This effectively increases the cost of carrying a balance. For example, a ₹1,000 interest charge will be accompanied by an 18% GST of ₹180, making your actual cost ₹1,180 for that month's interest alone.
Impact of Minimum Payment on CIBIL Score
Does Paying Minimum Due Affect Credit Score?
Paying the minimum due does not, by itself, directly damage your CIBIL score, the bank reports your payment as 'made on time' as long as at least the minimum is received by the due date. However, the consequences of consistently paying only the minimum indirectly hurt your score significantly. As your outstanding balance grows due to interest accumulation, your credit utilisation ratio rises, and a high credit utilisation ratio (above 30%–40%) pulls your CIBIL score down, even if every minimum payment was technically on time.
How Consistently Paying Only Minimum Due Hurts Long Term
Over time, the compounding of interest on an unpaid balance means your credit utilisation ratio remains stubbornly high or even increases. A high utilisation ratio, sustained over multiple billing cycles, systematically reduces your CIBIL score. Additionally, if you reach a point where even the minimum due becomes difficult to pay, a common outcome of the debt trap, a single missed minimum payment is reported to credit bureaus and can reduce your score by 50–100 points in a single reporting cycle.
Minimum Payment vs Full Payment: Which Is Better?
Cost Comparison, Minimum Due vs Full Payment
The comparison is unambiguous. Paying the full outstanding balance on time costs you zero interest, you have used the bank's credit for the billing cycle at no charge. Paying only the minimum due triggers finance charges that can amount to 30%–48% per annum on the unpaid balance. On a ₹50,000 outstanding at 42% per annum, paying only the minimum versus paying in full represents a difference of approximately ₹21,000 in annual interest charges, money spent with no return whatsoever.
When Paying Minimum Due Makes Sense
There is a narrow set of circumstances where paying the minimum due is a reasonable, short-term measure: a genuine cash flow emergency where the funds to pay in full are temporarily unavailable. In this scenario, paying the minimum due is better than missing the payment entirely, as it avoids the late payment fee and prevents a negative CIBIL report for that cycle. However, this should be a deliberate exception with a clear plan to clear the outstanding in full the following cycle, never a recurring habit.
Why Full Payment Is Always the Smarter Choice
Paying your full credit card outstanding every billing cycle is the single most powerful financial habit you can build as a credit card user. It eliminates all interest charges, preserves your interest-free period for new transactions, keeps your utilisation ratio low, and builds a consistent positive payment record with credit bureaus. The opportunity cost of not doing so, the compounding interest, the lost credit score points, the extended debt tenure, is enormous relative to the short-term relief of a smaller minimum payment.
Tips to Avoid the Minimum Payment Trap
Set Up Auto-Pay for Full Outstanding Amount
The most effective structural protection against the minimum payment trap is to set up an auto-pay mandate for the full outstanding balance from your savings account on the credit card due date. This removes the decision entirely, every month, the full bill is cleared automatically without requiring manual action. Ensure sufficient funds are available in your savings account around the due date to prevent the auto-pay from failing.
Convert Large Balances to EMI Before Due Date
If you have made a large purchase and anticipate difficulty paying the full outstanding in a single cycle, consider converting the transaction to an EMI through your bank's app before the billing due date. EMI interest rates on credit cards, typically 12%–18% per annum, are significantly lower than revolving finance charges of 36%–42%. Converting removes the large balance from your revolving credit and replaces it with a structured, fixed monthly obligation at a lower interest rate.
Spend Only What You Can Repay in Full
This is the foundational rule of smart credit card usage. Before making any credit card purchase, ask whether you can pay for it in full when the bill arrives. If the answer is no, either defer the purchase or use a different payment method. A credit card is a payment convenience tool that earns rewards, not an extended credit facility for purchases beyond your current means. Treating it as the latter is the entry point for the minimum payment trap.
Use Balance Transfer to Reduce Interest Burden
If you are already carrying a revolving balance on a high-interest card, a balance transfer to a card offering a low or zero percent promotional interest rate for an initial period, typically 3–6 months, can significantly reduce your interest burden and give you a window to pay down the principal. Balance transfers usually carry a processing fee (1%–2% of the transferred amount), but this is almost always lower than the finance charge you would otherwise accumulate. Use the promotional period aggressively to clear as much of the principal as possible before the standard rate kicks in.
Use Credit Responsibly with BOBCARD.
BOBCARD is built for cardholders who want to use credit as a tool, not a trap. With transparent billing, digital statement access, and auto-pay setup available through the Bank of Baroda app, BOBCARD makes it easy to pay in full, stay on track, and build a strong credit profile month after month.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This blog is for general educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Interest rate ranges, minimum payment calculation methods, late payment fee structures, and CIBIL score impact figures referenced in this article are indicative and based on publicly available data from Indian banks and credit bureaus as of the date of publication. Actual terms vary by card issuer and product. GST rates are subject to change per government notification. Readers are advised to refer to their specific card's MITC document for exact charges. BOBCARD is a product of Bank of Baroda, an RBI-regulated entity.