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The Fed's Own Forecast Just Flipped From Cut to Maybe Hike. Your 0% Balance Transfer Window Is Closing.

In three months, the Fed's dot plot moved the projected end-2026 rate from 3.4% to 3.8%, above where the funds rate sits today. That kills the 'wait for a cut' bet on credit card APRs. Here is the move for anyone carrying a card balance.

Person entering a credit card number into a laptop at a kitchen counter

If you are carrying a credit card balance and you have been waiting for the Fed to cut so your APR drops with it, stop waiting. The Fed’s own June forecast just told you the cut you were counting on is not coming, and a small hike is now the middle of the room.

Here is what happened. On June 17 the Fed held its target rate at 3.50 to 3.75 percent, where it has sat since fall 2025. The vote was 12 to 0. That part was priced in. The part that mattered was the quarterly Summary of Economic Projections, the sheet Fed watchers call the dot plot. In March, the median policymaker expected the funds rate to end 2026 at 3.4 percent, a small cut from here. In June, that median jumped to 3.8 percent, above the current level. Median core PCE inflation for 2026 was revised up from 2.7 percent to 3.3 percent in the same three months. Translation: inflation is running hotter than the Fed thought this spring, and the “cut this fall” case is no longer the base case for the median voter.

That matters for you because credit card APRs move with the Fed’s rate plus the bank’s margin. Bank margins have not shrunk. The Fed’s Q1 2026 G.19 report has the average APR at 21.00 percent across all card accounts and 21.52 percent on the accounts that actually carry a balance. Those numbers do not go down while the Fed’s own median dot is going up.

Here is the catch that a lot of card holders have not clocked. Zero percent balance transfer offers are still on the market at 15 and 21 month intro periods because issuers priced them when a Fed cut still looked plausible. Those offers get repriced downward, not upward, when the outlook tightens. The teaser terms sitting on issuer websites today are the best terms you are likely to see for a while. If you are betting on a better offer next quarter, you are betting against the Fed’s own median.

The move, if you carry a balance. Pull your credit report and get a rough sense of your score. If you are at 680 or higher, price a balance transfer card with a 0 percent intro of at least 15 months and a transfer fee between 3 and 5 percent. On a $6,000 balance paid down over 15 months at 21.52 percent, interest runs roughly $900. Move that same $6,000 to a 0 percent card with a 4 percent transfer fee and you pay $240 up front and $0 in interest. Net savings around $660 in real money, if you actually clear it in the intro window. If your score is under 680 or you cannot open a new card, price a two-year unsecured personal loan. Rates near 12 percent are worse than 0 but still cut 21.52 percent almost in half.

Do the math this week, not next month. The direction the Fed’s own forecast is pointing does not help the borrower who waits.

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Frequently asked questions

What changed in the Fed's June forecast?

The June 17 Summary of Economic Projections moved the median federal funds rate projection for the end of 2026 from 3.4% in March to 3.8% in June. Since the funds rate sits at 3.50 to 3.75% today, the June median is now above the current level, implying a small hike, not a cut, is the middle of the range in the room. The vote to hold rates at the June meeting itself was unanimous, 12 to 0.

What is the average credit card APR right now?

The Federal Reserve's G.19 report released June 5, 2026 shows the average credit card APR across all accounts at 21.00% for the first quarter of 2026, and 21.52% on accounts that carry a balance. New card offers are running higher than that.

Is a balance transfer worth the fee?

Usually yes, if you can clear the balance during the 0% intro period. On a $6,000 balance at 21.52% paid off over 15 months, interest runs roughly $900. Moving that to a 0% card with a 4% transfer fee costs $240 up front and $0 in interest, saving about $660 net. The math only works if you stop charging the new card and actually pay it off before the promo ends.

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