logo
Planning a credit card loan? It could cost you 40-50% more in interest

Planning a credit card loan? It could cost you 40-50% more in interest

Banks have been aggressively promoting credit card loans as a quick source of funds for customers. These loans are often just a few clicks away, appear pre-approved in your app, and promise instant disbursal. But while they seem frictionless, experts warn they can be deceptively expensive.
'It's important to understand the structure and intent behind these offers,' says Siddarth, chief financial officer at MinEMI.
'Credit card loans are a way for banks to monetise inactive cards by offering quick credit, often at lower interest rates than standard card spending but still much higher than other loan types,' he added
How credit card loans differ from swipes
Unlike regular credit card purchases that qualify for an interest-free period of up to 45 days, a credit card loan starts attracting interest from Day 1.
'A credit card swipe is revolving credit, you can pay in full or partially,' explains Vibhore Goyal, founder at OneBanc.
'A card loan, by contrast, is a fixed EMI commitment with no interest-free buffer. The structure suits the bank, it guarantees interest income,' he added
'These loans may appear within or above your existing credit limit,' adds Shravan Shetty, managing director, Primus Partners.
What it costs you
Interest rate are usually 18-24 per cent per annum (flat monthly rate of 0.99–1.5 per cent)
-Processing fee: 1-2 per cent
-Prepayment penalty: 3-5 per cent in some cases
-Tenure: 6 to 36 months
'A Rs 1 lakh loan at 1.25 per cent flat rate will cost about Rs 10,000 in interest over a year,' says Goyal.
'While a personal loan at 13 per cent reducing balance interest would cost Rs 6,800. That's nearly 40–50 per cent higher interest just due to the rate structure,' he explained.
When it makes sense and when it doesn't
Experts agree these loans are best suited for short-term, urgent needs.
'Use them only when speed trumps cost, medical needs, sudden relocation, or unavoidable family expenses,' says Manish Kumar Goyal, chairman and managing director at Finkeda.
Avoid lifestyle upgrades or non-critical purchases.
'We've seen people take Rs 1.5 lakh loans for house deposits and later struggle to qualify for home loans due to a high debt-to-income ratio,' cautions Siddarth.
'If the loan helps avoid loss or generate return, like a job-certification course, it's productive. If not, it's just deferred pain,' Goyal adds
Fine print borrowers often miss
'The biggest trap isn't hidden. It's behavioural, people see instant access and assume affordability. But fast money comes at a premium,' Goyal said.
Bottom line: A credit card loan isn't necessarily a trap but it is a financial commitment. Pause, compare, and ask yourself, 'Is it really urgent, or just easy?'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UAE Central Bank suspends motor insurance business of Oriental Insurance in Dubai: Here's why
UAE Central Bank suspends motor insurance business of Oriental Insurance in Dubai: Here's why

Indian Express

time13 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

UAE Central Bank suspends motor insurance business of Oriental Insurance in Dubai: Here's why

The Central Bank of the UAE (CBUAE) has suspended the motor insurance operations of state-owned Oriental Insurance Company (OIC) in Dubai due to non-compliance with regulatory requirements in the country. OIC has decided to place its Dubai operations in run-off mode. The branch, which began operations in 1960, generated a total business of Rs 296 crore in 2024. 'The insurer remains liable for all rights and obligations arising from insurance contracts concluded before the suspension,' CBUAE said in a note. This action comes as a result of the entity's failure to comply with the solvency and guarantee requirements, specified in the Law and prevailing regulations governing insurance companies in the UAE, CBUAE said. The CBUAE, through its supervisory and regulatory mandates, endeavours to ensure that all insurers, their owners and staff comply with the UAE laws, regulations and standards established by the CBUAE to maintain transparency and integrity of the insurance sector and safeguard the UAE financial ecosystem, the UAE regulatory body said. In insurance terms, 'run-off' means the company will continue to manage and settle claims on existing policies until they expire, but it is no longer allowed to issue new policies. 'CBUAE suspended the motor insurance business of a foreign insurance company's branch (insurer), pursuant to Articles (33) and (44) of Federal Decree Law No. (48) of 2023 Regulating Insurance Activities,' CBUAE said. OIC has informed the CBUAE that its Dubai branch will move into run-off operations starting August 7. The company assured that it will fully meet all obligations and commitments arising from policies issued before this date, continuing to service them until their natural expiry. OIC was required to deposit a statutory bank guarantee of AED 100 million, but the Central Bank of the UAE (CBUAE) denied its request for additional time to obtain board and regulatory approvals. As a result, the regulator barred the company from issuing new or renewal motor insurance policies, a source said. OIC has overseas operations in Nepal, Kuwait and Dubai. In August 2021, State-owned General Insurance Corporation (GIC Re), a leading non-life reinsurer globally, decided to put its Dubai branch into run off mode as the Dubai authority did not renew the licence issued to the company. The reinsurer was to run the Dubai business from the GIFT City IFSC in Ahmedabad. GIC has three overseas offices — branch offices in London, Dubai and Malaysia. Apart from this, it has three wholly owned subsidiaries — GIC Re South Africa Ltd., Johannesburg; GIC Re, India, Corporate Member Limited, London and GIC Perestrakhovanie LLC, Moscow. The company has also invested in the share capitals of Kenindia Assurance Company Ltd, Kenya, India International Insurance Pte Ltd, Singapore, Asian Reinsurance Corporation, Bangkok, East Africa Reinsurance Company Ltd, Kenya, and GIC Bhutan Re Ltd, Bhutan. New India Assurance placed its operations in two countries under run-off. The Hong Kong branch entered run-off on April 1, 2022, followed by the Philippines branch on January 1, 2023, after a strategic review of regulatory requirements and business viability. Despite these exits, the company continues to operate in around 24 countries, with branches or affiliates in key markets such as the UK, Japan, UAE, Australia, Thailand, Singapore, and Nigeria.

Capri Global Q1 results: Net profit jumps over two-fold to ₹175 crore
Capri Global Q1 results: Net profit jumps over two-fold to ₹175 crore

Business Standard

time13 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

Capri Global Q1 results: Net profit jumps over two-fold to ₹175 crore

Capri Global Capital Ltd on Saturday reported more than two-fold jump in its consolidated net profit to Rs 175 crore for the quarter ended June 2025, aided by higher margins and operating efficiencies. The non-banking financial company had reported a profit after tax of Rs 76 crore in the year-ago period. Total income of the company rose by over 41 per cent to Rs 582 crore in the June quarter compared to Rs 410 crore in the year-ago period, a statement said. The non-banking financial company's consolidated assets under management (AUM) surged by 42 per cent year-on-year to Rs 24,754 crore in the first quarter of FY26, driven by robust growth in its retail loan portfolio, the company said. Capri Global's gold loans grew 69 per cent, while housing loans expanded 32 per cent during the quarter. Co-lending AUM rose 64 per cent to Rs 4,681 crore, contributing 18.9 per cent to the total AUM compared to 17.8 per cent in the previous quarter. The company's disbursements stood at Rs 8,458 crore, up 51 per cent on a yearly basis, with customer base surpassing 5.5 lakhs, it added. CGCL raised Rs 2,000 crore through a QIP during the quarter, taking its standalone capital adequacy ratio to 34 per cent. "Our tech-led infrastructure and customer-first approach will continue to enable us to scale efficiently while maintaining strong profitability. With margin expansion driven by high-yield products, steady growth in fee-based income, and tech-led cost efficiencies, we are well placed to deliver robust returns," Capri Global Capital Ltd founder & MD Rajesh Sharma said. The successful equity raise during the quarter has further strengthened our capital base, providing the capital to accelerate our geographic expansion and deepen our investments in AI and data science capabilities, he added.

Shah praises ₹20,500 crore PM-Kisan release, calls it farmer-friendly
Shah praises ₹20,500 crore PM-Kisan release, calls it farmer-friendly

Business Standard

time13 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

Shah praises ₹20,500 crore PM-Kisan release, calls it farmer-friendly

Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Saturday hailed the disbursement of Rs 20,500 crore to 9.7 crore farmers under the Kisan Samman Nidhi and said it was yet another "farmer-friendly" step of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. While visiting his parliamentary constituency Varanasi on Saturday, Modi also inaugurated and laid the foundation stone for 52 development projects worth approximately Rs 2,183.45 crore. In a major move to support farmers, the prime minister released the 20th instalment of the PM-Kisan Samman Nidhi, transferring Rs 20,500 crore to the bank accounts of over 9.70 crore eligible farmers across the country at a function held in his parliamentary constituency. "Farmer-friendly Modi ji today took another step towards farmer welfare by releasing the 20th installment of the 'Kisan Samman Nidhi' from Kashi. Under this, a total amount of more than Rs 20,500 crore was transferred to over 9.7 crore farmers across the country through DBT," he wrote on X in Hindi. Additionally, Shah said, the prime minister also laid the foundation stone and inaugurated various development projects worth Rs 2,200 crore for Varanasi. He said these projects related to infrastructure, education, health, tourism and cultural heritage will play a significant role in the reconstruction of Kashi and for public welfare.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store