Credit card interest rates average 20.7% as consumer balances top $1.14 trillion

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American consumers are carrying more credit card debt than ever, and the cost of carrying that debt remains punishingly high. Credit card balances have pushed past $1.2 trillion, while the average annual percentage rate on card plans has stayed near 21%, leaving many households with less room to absorb higher housing, food, insurance, and transportation costs. That pairing matters because it changes what a credit card balance means in practice. A balance that might once have been manageable for a family making steady monthly payments now takes far longer to pay down, with a much larger share of each payment going toward interest. Even if borrowing growth has not yet tipped the broader economy into a downturn, the pressure is clearly building in household finances, particularly among younger borrowers and people already living close to the edge.

How high rates and record balances collided

The latest Federal Reserve G.19 consumer credit release shows the average rate on credit card plans for all accounts at commercial banks was 20.97% in November 2025. The matching FRED series maintained by the St. Louis Fed confirms that reading and shows how dramatically card borrowing costs have risen over the past few years. On the debt side, the New York Fed’s Q3 2025 Household Debt and Credit report found that credit card balances rose by another $24 billion from the prior quarter to reach $1.23 trillion. That means the old $1.14 trillion milestone is no longer the ceiling. It is now a waystation on a climb that has continued even as rates remained near generational highs.

What the 21% average actually means

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Image by Freepik
The widely quoted rate from the Fed is the average across all credit card accounts, not just the cards actively carrying interest-bearing balances. In the same Fed release, the rate on accounts assessed interest was 22.30%, a reminder that people who revolve debt month to month often face a borrowing cost even higher than the headline figure suggests. That distinction matters because it separates casual card use from financial strain. Consumers who pay in full every month may notice higher rates only in theory. Consumers who carry balances feel them in cash terms. At an APR above 20%, even a few thousand dollars in revolving debt can generate hundreds of dollars a year in interest charges, slowing payoff and making it easier for balances to linger or grow.

Why card APRs have stayed so high

Credit card rates tend to move with the prime rate, which in turn tracks the broader interest-rate environment. But issuers do not simply mirror the Fed. They also set margins above prime, and those margins have become an increasingly important part of the story. A Consumer Financial Protection Bureau analysis found that credit card interest rate margins had reached record highs, helping explain why card APRs climbed more than many borrowers expected. The CFPB’s more recent 2025 credit card market report also underscored how central interest income has become to the economics of the market. In plain terms, even when benchmark rates stop rising, cardholders should not expect instant relief. That helps explain one of the most striking features of the current cycle: balances kept growing even as borrowing got more expensive. In a textbook world, sharply higher rates cool demand. In the real world, many households are using credit cards not for luxury spending but to manage gaps in monthly cash flow. When cards become a backstop for groceries, insurance premiums, car repairs, or utility bills, higher rates do not necessarily reduce use. They just raise the penalty for needing the credit in the first place.

Younger borrowers are showing more stress

The debt burden is not spread evenly. The New York Fed said in early 2024 that credit card and auto loan delinquencies were rising above pre-pandemic levels, with increased financial stress especially visible among younger and lower-income households. Its data showed serious credit card delinquencies increasing across all age groups, with younger borrowers moving above pre-pandemic norms. That pattern was later echoed in Associated Press reporting on rising severe delinquencies, which highlighted how consumers in their 20s and 30s were having the most trouble keeping up with card payments. Those borrowers often have smaller savings cushions, thinner credit files, and less income flexibility than older households. When interest costs rise at the same time rent, food, and insurance stay elevated, they tend to feel the squeeze first.

Why this matters beyond personal finance

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Image by Freepik
Credit card debt alone is not a recession call, and consumer spending has remained resilient longer than many economists expected. But high-rate revolving debt can become an early warning sign when it starts pairing with rising delinquency and weaker payment capacity. The New York Fed’s Q3 2025 report said overall delinquency rates remained elevated, with 4.5% of outstanding debt in some stage of delinquency. For credit cards specifically, the flow into serious delinquency stayed high at 7.05% of balances on an annualized basis. That does not mean a crisis is imminent. It does mean household finances are carrying more strain than topline spending data alone may suggest. For individual readers, the takeaway is simple. The problem is no longer just that Americans owe a lot on their cards. It is that they owe a lot while borrowing at rates still hovering near 21%. That combination makes debt more persistent, turns minimum payments into a long grind, and leaves less margin for error if the job market softens or everyday costs rise again. For lenders, policymakers, and anyone trying to read the state of the U.S. consumer, that is the real story. Record balances get attention. Near-21% borrowing costs explain why they are becoming harder to escape.