If you carry a balance on a credit card, you are paying about 21% for the privilege, and that number is not coming down this year. Americans now owe a record $1.252 trillion on cards. The Fed left rates alone at its early-2026 meetings, so the rate on your balance is stuck near the top of its range.
The Fed’s own G.19 report puts the average rate on all card accounts at 21.00%. On the cards actually carrying a balance, it is 21.52%. Open a new card and the average offer is 23.79%, per LendingTree. Translation: the bank borrows near 4% and lends it back to you at five times that. They are betting you will pay the minimum and never run the math.
Here’s what they don’t tell you: about 45% of cardholders carried a balance at some point in the past year, per a Federal Reserve study. Among people who revolve a balance, the average is $7,886.
$1.252 trillion: what Americans owe on credit cards as of Q1 2026, at an average 21% APR.
Run that $7,886 at 21.52%. That is about $1,697 a year in interest. Not principal. Interest. Money you hand the bank for nothing, stacked on top of what you actually bought. Pay the minimum and you ride that treadmill for years. Carrying a balance at 21% while the rate sits near a record is dumb math.
So here are two moves.
First, turn on autopay for the full statement balance on every card you can clear. Pay in full and the 21.52% never touches you. Not optional.
Second, if you already carry a balance you cannot wipe this month, stop feeding it and attack it. A low-interest card averages 17.31%, and a 0% balance-transfer card buys you a stretch with no interest if you kill the balance before the window closes. Compare options on our best credit cards list, then point everything you can at the balance. Push your numbers through our debt-payoff calculator so you see the actual payoff date, not just the minimum.
For context, card debt did dip from the Q4 2025 record of $1.277 trillion, the normal first-quarter breather, and delinquencies fell for a sixth straight quarter to 2.94%. So this is not a crisis headline. It is a quieter problem: rates are stuck high, the Fed is not riding to the rescue, and the cost of revolving a balance is as steep as it has been in years. The fix is boring and it works.
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