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What Is a Balance Transfer?

Erajah
ErajahFounder, Scypion Finance
Updated June 9, 20262 min read
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A balance transfer moves debt from one credit card (usually high-interest) to another (usually offering a promotional low or 0% APR). It's a debt management tool that saves thousands if used strategically.

How It Works

You have a credit card with $10,000 balance at 18% APR. You apply for a new card offering 0% APR for 12 months on balance transfers.

If approved, you request a balance transfer of $10,000 from the old card to the new card. You then owe:

  • $10,000 on the new card at 0% for 12 months
  • A balance transfer fee (typically 3-5%, so $300-$500)
  • Regular APR applies after the 12-month period if balance remains

The Math: Does It Save Money?

Scenario: $10,000 credit card balance at 18% APR

Option A: No balance transfer

  • Interest cost (paying $300/month): $1,200/year
  • Time to payoff: 37 months
  • Total interest: $1,850

Option B: Balance transfer to 0% APR for 12 months

  • Balance transfer fee: $350 (3.5%)
  • Interest cost (first 12 months): $0
  • If you pay $833/month for 12 months: You eliminate $10,000
  • Total cost: $350

The balance transfer saves $1,500 in interest if you pay aggressively during the 0% period.

Critical Success Factor

The 0% period has an expiration date. If you transfer $10,000 on January 1st with a 12-month offer:

  • January 1 - December 31: 0% interest
  • January 1 (next year): Regular APR applies to remaining balance

If $5,000 remains on January 1st, it gets charged 20% APR, costing $1,000/year on the remaining balance.

When Balance Transfers Make Sense

  1. You have a specific payoff plan during the 0% period
  2. The fee is low relative to interest savings
  3. You won't use the new card for additional purchases
  4. You can resist the temptation to repeat (avoiding "balance transfer addiction")

Without discipline and a payoff plan, balance transfers extend debt duration and worsen financial health.

◆ Sources

  1. Balance Transfer — Investopedia
Erajah
Erajah
Founder, Scypion Finance

Founded Scypion Finance because the gap between financial news and real understanding is too wide — and nobody should have to navigate economics alone. Every article starts from zero because that's where most people actually are.

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