What Trump credit card interest rate cap proposal means for your money

What Trump credit card interest rate cap proposal means for your money

What a one-year, 10% credit card interest rate cap could mean for consumers

President Donald Trump’s call for a temporary 10% cap on credit card interest rates, if implemented, could have significant impacts — both positive and negative — for borrowers.

“Effective January 20, 2026, I, as President of the United States, am calling for a one year cap on Credit Card Interest Rates of 10%,” Trump wrote on Truth Social on Friday.

The president did not provide details on how his plan would come to fruition or how he planned to make credit card issuers comply. It is also unclear whether Trump’s proposal would pertain to new or existing balances.

A White House official told CNBC that additional details on the president’s proposal would be forthcoming.

‘A really, really big deal for credit cardholders’

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The average credit card interest rate in the U.S. fell to 23.79% in January, marking the lowest level since March 2023 and continuing several months of declines, according to LendingTree.

If there were a rate cap, “there’s no question that it would be a really, really big deal for credit cardholders,” Schulz said.

For example, if you put $250 a month toward the average credit card balance of $7,000 with an annual percentage rate of 23.79%, it would take you 41 months to pay off the debt and cost more than $3,314 in interest over that time period, Schulz calculated. At 10%, those same payments could pay off the debt in 32 months and cost just $1,004 in interest. 

Banks could curb credit access

Effects could include higher fees, fewer rewards

Anna Barclay | Getty Images

Banks make money off credit cards in three ways: Transaction fees to merchants, known as “swipe fees,” fees charged to consumers and interest on carried balances.

“Even with a 10 percent cap, credit cards will remain among the most profitable businesses in banking, generating more than $150 billion in annual swipe fees and billions more in fees, all before the tens of billions in interest that will remain available under a cap,” said Adam Rust, director of financial services at the Consumer Federation of America.

Banks could add or increase fees and change repayment structures to make up for any loss in interest revenue, experts say. They could also tinker with rewards programs.

Under Trump’s proposal, “I would envision sharp cutbacks in access to credit and rewards programs,” Rossman said.  “This would completely upend the credit card market as we know it.”

Brian Shearer, director of competition and regulatory policy at the Vanderbilt Policy Accelerator, a political economy research center at Vanderbilt University, told CNBC the potential effect on rewards is “a far overblown downside.”

Industry profit margins are significant enough that capping interest rates at 18% or 15% “would save Americans $16 billion and $48 billion annually, respectively, with no impact to rewards or lending volumes,” according to a September analysis by Shearer.

A 10% cap would save Americans $100 billion in interest, the analysis found, but could also trigger a $27 billion reduction in credit card rewards affecting borrowers with credit scores of 760 or lower. Even so, the interest saved far outweighs that loss, Shearer said: “The reduced rewards pale in comparison to the savings on interest that those same people would get.”

A 2024 LendingTree survey found that most Americans still support a cap even if it leads to restricted credit and diminished rewards.  

Steps to help secure a lower rate

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