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Lesson 46 min

How to Read Your Credit Card Statement

Understand every section of your credit card statement including billing cycles, minimum payments, and transaction details.

## How to Read Your Credit Card Statement Your credit card statement is a monthly summary of everything that happened on your account. Learning to read it properly helps you catch errors, avoid fees, and stay on top of your finances. ### The Statement at a Glance Every credit card statement contains several key sections, required by federal law under the **CARD Act of 2009**: ### 1. Account Summary This top section gives you the big picture: - **Previous Balance:** What you owed at the end of the last billing cycle. - **Payments and Credits:** The total amount you paid or any refunds/credits applied. - **New Charges:** All purchases made during this billing cycle. - **Fees Charged:** Any annual fees, late fees, or other charges. - **Interest Charged:** The total interest accrued during this cycle. - **New Balance:** Your total amount owed right now (previous balance - payments + new charges + fees + interest). ### 2. Payment Information This is the most action-critical section: - **Minimum Payment Due:** The smallest amount you can pay without triggering a late fee. This is typically the greater of $25 or 1-2% of your balance plus interest and fees. - **Payment Due Date:** The deadline for your payment. Paying after this date results in a late fee and potential credit score damage. - **Late Payment Warning:** A required disclosure showing the late fee amount you will be charged if you miss the due date. **Important:** Paying only the minimum is extremely costly. Your statement must include a **Minimum Payment Warning** showing how long it will take to pay off your balance by making only minimum payments and how much total interest you will pay. ### 3. Transaction Details A chronological list of every transaction during the billing cycle: - **Transaction date:** When the purchase was made. - **Posting date:** When the transaction was processed and added to your balance. - **Merchant name and location:** Who you paid and where. - **Amount:** The dollar amount of each transaction. - **Category code:** Some statements show the merchant category, which affects rewards earning rates. **Review this section carefully every month.** Look for transactions you do not recognize -- they could be fraudulent charges, subscription services you forgot about, or merchant errors. ### 4. Interest Charge Calculation This section breaks down exactly how your interest was calculated: - **Balance subject to interest:** The portion of your balance that accrued interest. - **APR applied:** The rate used to calculate interest (purchase APR, cash advance APR, etc.). - **Interest charge:** The actual dollar amount of interest for this cycle. If you paid your full statement balance last month, this section should show $0.00 in interest charges. ### 5. Year-to-Date Totals Your statement also shows cumulative totals for the calendar year: - **Total fees charged year-to-date** - **Total interest charged year-to-date** These numbers can be eye-opening. If you see that you have paid $400 in interest so far this year, that is a strong motivator to pay off your balance. ### Key Takeaways - Review your statement every month -- do not just autopay and ignore it. - Always check the transaction list for unauthorized charges or forgotten subscriptions. - The minimum payment warning shows the true cost of carrying a balance. - Your statement is a legal document; dispute errors within 60 days under the Fair Credit Billing Act.

Statement Review Exercise

Your statement shows: Previous Balance $1,500, Payments $1,500, New Charges $800, Fees $0, Interest $0, New Balance $800. Minimum payment is $25. If your purchase APR is 22%, how much interest would you pay next month if you only pay the $25 minimum?

Lesson Quiz

Test your understanding of this lesson. You need 60% to pass and mark the lesson as complete.

QUESTION 1 OF 4

What does the "New Balance" on your statement represent?