finance · 2026-05-01
Compare paying current credit card balance at original APR vs transferring to a 0% intro APR card with a balance-transfer fee.
| Current card balance | $8,000 |
| Current APR % | 24% |
| Monthly payment | $400 |
| Balance transfer fee % | 3% |
| Intro 0% APR months | 18 |
| Post-intro APR % | 22% |
| Interest paid (stay) | $2,319 |
| Interest paid (transfer) | $276 |
| Transfer fee paid | $240 |
| Months to pay off (stay) | 26 |
| Months to pay off (transfer) | 21 |
Balance transfer cards offer 0% APR for 12-21 months in exchange for a one-time fee (typically 3-5% of transferred balance). The transfer is worth it when:
Interest avoided during intro period > Transfer fee
The 0% intro APR ENDS. If you're still carrying balance when it does, the new APR (22-29%) applies retroactively in some cards (deferred interest), or starts the day after the intro ends. Either way, you've replaced one high-APR debt with another, plus paid the transfer fee. Worse than not transferring at all.
Almost always for high-APR debt. 3% upfront is one month of interest at 36% APR. If you avoid 12+ months of interest at 22-29%, you save 20-30% of balance net of fee. The math only fails if you can't actually pay off during the intro period.
Two short-term negatives: (1) hard inquiry from new card application, ~5-10 point drop. (2) Higher utilization on the new card if it's a smaller credit limit than you transfer. Both recover within 6-12 months. Long-term positive: paying down debt fast improves utilization, which is the biggest factor in the score.
Generally no — balance transfer offers are specifically for new cardholders. Existing-customer offers exist but are rare and less generous. The 0% intro periods of 18-21 months are essentially only available to new customers as acquisition incentives.
Compare the loan APR (typically 8-15% for good credit) to your post-intro card rate (22-29%). Personal loans win when (a) you can't pay off during intro period and (b) loan APR is meaningfully below post-intro APR. Loans also have fixed payoff date, which forces discipline.