Everything you need to understand promotional financing and avoid the backdated-interest penalty.
Deferred interest financing — the "No Interest if Paid in Full" offers attached to medical cards, store cards, and home-improvement loans — can be a useful tool or an expensive trap, depending entirely on whether you clear the balance before the deadline. These guides explain how it works in plain language, with real numbers, so you can use these offers safely.
How deferred interest works, which lenders use it, and how to avoid the backdated penalty.
How CareCredit's promotional financing really works — the 26.99% APR, the plans, and the trap.
The exact mechanics of the penalty, a worked example, and your options if the deadline is close.
They look identical in ads but are financially very different. How to tell them apart before you sign.
The simple math and the step-by-step plan to clear a deferred-interest balance before the penalty fires.
Straight answers to the questions borrowers most often ask about deferred interest.
If an offer says "No Interest if Paid in Full in X months," interest is quietly accruing the whole time. Pay the balance to $0 before the deadline and you owe nothing extra. Leave even $1 and every month of accrued interest is charged at once. The fix is simple: find your deadline, divide your balance by the months remaining, and pay that amount — not the minimum. The calculator does the math for you.
Enter your balance, APR, and deadline. The calculator shows your required payment and the deferred-interest penalty in real time.
Open the Calculator →