Home / Top News / What to know about store credit cards, deferred interest financing

What to know about store credit cards, deferred interest financing


Store credit cards may try to lure you in with steep discounts and tempting sign-up offers, but you should think twice before signing up for one.

That’s because many retail offer credit cards or special financing plans come with so-called “deferred interest.”

Stores typically offer deferred interest periods ranging from six months to two years. As long as you make regular payments during that period, the store won’t charge you interest. But if you miss a payment or don’t pay off your balance on time, you’ll be charged for all of the interest that has accrued since you made the purchase.

That interest can add up. In fact, you may end up paying nearly 28 times more in interest charges by using a store credit card with deferred interest than you would using a regular credit card with a 0% annual percentage rate, according to data from WalletHub.

“Deferred interest should be a last resort,” Odysseas Papadimitriou, CEO and founder of WalletHub, tells CNBC Make It.

Although signing up for a store credit card with deferred interest isn’t “the worst idea in the world” if you’re able to adhere to the payment schedule, you don’t want to make it your first financing option if you can help it, he says.

Deferred interest financing can come with costly penalties

Around 60% of people don’t understand how deferred interest works, WalletHub reports. That can potentially lead to expensive surprises down the road.

If you get a regular credit card with a 0% APR period and fail to pay it off by the end of the term, you’ll just owe interest on your remaining balance. However, if you don’t clear your balance on a deferred interest credit card, you’ll have to cover all of the interest charges that accumulated during the promotional period.

And those interest charges could be steep. Many of the regular rates for the store credit cards WalletHub analyzed were over 30%.

Say you buy a new kitchen appliance for $5,000 with the store’s 12-month, 0% deferred interest financing plan. Although you won’t be charged interest during the promotional period, it will still accumulate.

If you miss your last payment and the card’s regular interest rate is 29%, you could be on the hook for around $800 in retroactive interest, even though you were close to paying off your entire purchase, says Ted Rossman, Bankrate’s senior industry analyst.

“I suspect most people don’t realize they can be charged retroactively for all of the interest that would have accumulated back to the start of the promotion if they fail to pay the entire amount before the deferred interest offer expires — even if they just have $1 left,” he tells CNBC Make It.

Deferred interest v. balance transfer credit cards

When it comes to deferred interest, proceed with caution

We live on a sailboat & travel the world for $1,900/month — take a look inside

About admin

Check Also

How yelling at kids affects their happiness, success

Almost every parent yells at their child eventually, no matter how hard they try to …