⚡ Quick Answer
Credit cards let you buy now and pay later. Pay the full balance by the statement due date each month and you pay zero interest — the card is free short-term credit. Carry a balance and you typically pay 20-40% APR on the outstanding amount. Credit cards also provide legal protection under Section 75 for purchases between £100 and £30,000. The single habit that determines whether a credit card is a tool or a debt trap: pay in full every month, set up a direct debit for the full statement balance.
Credit cards divide opinions sharply — some people use them as powerful financial tools that earn rewards and provide consumer protections; others get into expensive debt that takes years to escape. The difference is almost entirely behavioural: one decision made at account opening.
How Interest Works
Every credit card has an interest-free window — typically 45-56 days from the purchase date to the payment due date. Pay the full statement balance by the due date: no interest charged at all. Carry any balance forward: interest applies to the outstanding amount, typically at 20-40% APR, from the purchase date.
Even a small balance carried over triggers interest on the full outstanding amount, not just the carried portion. This is why the advice is always to pay the full balance — not just the minimum, not “most of it.”
The Minimum Payment Trap
Credit card minimum payments are set deliberately low — typically 1-3% of the balance, or £25-£35, whichever is higher. Paying only the minimum is the most expensive way to have a credit card.
Example: £2,500 balance at 25% APR, paying minimum only. Time to clear: approximately 11-12 years. Total interest paid: roughly £2,100 — more than 80% of the original balance. Pay £150/month instead: cleared in approximately 19 months with roughly £270 in interest.
Section 75 Protection
For purchases between £100 and £30,000 made on a credit card, Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act makes the card company jointly liable if the seller defaults, provides something materially different from what was ordered, or goes into administration. You can claim against the card company as well as the retailer.
This protection doesn’t apply to debit card or cash purchases. It makes credit cards preferable for significant purchases — holiday bookings, electronics, large services. Even if you pay the credit card off immediately, the Section 75 protection applies.
0% Purchase Cards
Some cards offer 0% interest on purchases for a promotional period (typically 12-24 months). This is genuinely free credit if you clear the balance within the period. The risk: if the balance isn’t cleared when the 0% period ends, it reverts to the full APR — often 25%+.
Using a 0% purchase card requires the discipline to maintain a clear payoff plan from day one, not just treat it as deferred spending with a vague intention to pay later.
If you’re already carrying a credit card balance and looking to pay it down efficiently, our article on how to pay off debt faster covers balance transfers and repayment strategies in detail.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does having a credit card help my credit score?
Yes — when used responsibly. Having a credit card and paying in full each month demonstrates creditworthiness. Keeping utilisation below 30% of your limit (not maxing the card) and paying on time every month builds a positive credit history over time.
What’s the difference between a credit card and a charge card?
A charge card requires the full balance to be paid each month — there’s no option to carry a balance. Credit cards allow carrying a balance (at a cost). Most American Express products, for example, are charge cards with no ability to revolve debt.
For current best-buy credit cards (0% periods, rewards, and low rates), MoneySavingExpert’s credit card comparison is comprehensive and regularly updated.
