How to Pay Off $1,500 in Credit Card Debt
See exactly how long it takes to pay off $1,500 at different payment levels and interest rates.
At 20% APR with $100/month
1 year 6 months
Total interest: $300 • Total paid: $1,800
Payoff Scenarios at 20% APR
Compare three payment strategies for a $1,500 balance at a 20% annual percentage rate.
| Strategy | Monthly Payment | Months | Total Interest | Total Paid |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum (~2%) | $30 | 109 | $1,770 | $3,270 |
| Moderate (5%) | $100 | 18 | $300 | $1,800 |
| Aggressive (10%) | $200 | 9 | $300 | $1,800 |
Different Interest Rates
How the interest rate affects payoff cost for a $1,500 balance at a $100 monthly payment.
| APR | Months to Pay Off | Total Interest |
|---|---|---|
| 18% | 18 | $300 |
| 20% | 18 | $300 |
| 24% | 19 | $400 |
What $1,500 in Credit Card Debt Really Means
$1,500 in credit card debt is a common amount carried after a major purchase or a rough financial stretch. At typical APRs of 18–24%, minimum payments barely chip away at the principal — most of each payment goes to interest. Paying two to three times the minimum accelerates payoff significantly and can save hundreds in total interest.
Other Credit Card Balances
Want to use a different balance, APR, or monthly payment? Use the interactive Credit Card Payoff Calculator →
How to Pay Off Your Credit Card Faster
- Pay more than the minimum every month — even $50 extra accelerates payoff significantly.
- Apply any windfalls (tax refunds, bonuses, gifts) directly to the balance.
- Consider a 0% balance transfer card to pause interest while you pay down principal.
- Stop using the card for new purchases until the balance is cleared.