U.S. credit card debt crossed $1.3 trillion and the average APR hit 21.52% for accounts accruing interest. If you’re paying interest every month and only making minimum payments, the math is brutal โ a $6,580 balance at 21% takes over 15 years and more than $6,000 in interest to eliminate. A 0% balance transfer card stops that clock entirely. Here’s what’s actually available right now, what each card is good for, and the fine print most guides skip.
A 0% balance transfer card charges zero interest on the amount you move over for a limited introductory window โ typically 15 to 24 months. After that window closes, the regular variable APR (currently averaging 17%โ29% depending on the card) applies to whatever balance remains. The 0% rate also does not apply to new purchases on most cards โ only to the transferred amount. Every dollar you pay during the 0% period goes entirely toward reducing your principal, not servicing interest. That is the entire point, and it is genuinely powerful. But it only works if you have a realistic monthly payment plan and you stick to it. A $6,000 balance on a 21-month card requires $286 per month to clear it completely before interest kicks in. Run the calculator below before you apply.
These are the questions people actually ask โ including the ones most guides dance around. Read the ones that apply to your situation and skip the rest.
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Which 0% balance transfer card has the longest intro period right now? U.S. Bank Shield Visa: 24 billing cycles (new, longest available) ยท Wells Fargo Reflect, Citi Diamond Preferred, Chase Slate, BankAmericard: 21 months ยท Citi Simplicity: 18 months (recently changed from 21)U.S. Bank Shield has moved to the top of the heap with a 24-billing-cycle 0% window on both purchases and balance transfers โ the longest currently available on a general-purpose card with no annual fee. On a $9,000 balance, that works out to roughly $375 a month to pay it off completely before interest starts. Wells Fargo Reflect, Chase Slate, and BankAmericard hold at 21 months โ nearly two years โ and are all strong options for larger balances that need more runway. One important terminology note: “billing cycles” and “months” are not exactly the same. A billing cycle is roughly a month, but 21 billing cycles from account opening is usually 21 to 22 calendar months depending on your billing date โ giving you slightly more time than “21 months” suggests.
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Is a 0% balance transfer a good idea if you can’t pay it all off in time? Still often yes โ even partial paydown saves real money ยท On a $8,000 balance at 22% APR, 18 months of 0% saves ~$2,640 in interest even if $2,000 remains ยท The key is knowing how much will remain and planning for the post-intro APRThe fear of not finishing in time stops many people from starting at all โ and that fear ends up costing them thousands. Here is the honest math: if you transfer $8,000 at 0% and pay $350 a month for 18 months, you will have paid down $6,300, leaving $1,700 plus the transfer fee. The interest you saved on the $6,300 you did pay off: roughly $2,200. The interest you now owe on the $1,700 at 18% APR going forward is manageable โ far less than what you would have paid by staying on the original 22% card the whole time. What actually matters is: (1) knowing the card’s post-intro APR before you apply, and (2) not treating the remaining balance as “forgotten” when the promo ends. BankAmericard has one of the lowest post-intro APR floors of any major bank card (starting at 14.99%), making it a thoughtful choice for people who know they won’t quite finish.
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What happens if I miss a payment during the 0% period? Most cards: penalty APR triggers immediately, ending your 0% rate ยท Citi Simplicity exception: no penalty APR, no late fee, ever ยท BankAmericard: no penalty APR either ยท Best protection: set up autopay for the minimum payment the day your card arrivesThis is the question that matters most and gets the least attention. On cards like Wells Fargo Reflect and Chase Slate, missing a payment can trigger a penalty APR that ends the 0% promotional period immediately โ and penalty APRs typically run 29.99% or higher. You go from 0% to nearly 30% in one mistake. Two cards on this list specifically protect against this: Citi Simplicity never charges a late fee and never applies a penalty APR, regardless of how many payments you miss. BankAmericard also doesn’t have a penalty APR. If you are managing multiple bills, medical expenses, or any situation where a payment might occasionally slip, these two cards are worth far more than their marginally longer or shorter intro windows suggest. For everyone else: set up autopay on day one, even if only for the minimum payment. The autopay is your insurance policy against a single forgetful moment ending your interest-free period.
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Does doing a balance transfer hurt your credit score? Short-term: small dip (hard inquiry ~3โ5 points, new account lowers average age) ยท Medium-term: lower credit utilization often improves score within 3โ6 months ยท Long-term: handled correctly, credit score often improves ยท Do NOT close the old card after transferring โ that hurts more than the transfer itselfA hard inquiry when you apply typically costs 3โ5 points temporarily. Adding a new account also lowers your average account age briefly. These are real but minor effects. The offsetting factor โ which many people don’t realize โ is credit utilization. If you transfer $5,000 from a card that’s near its limit to a new card with a $10,000 credit line, your overall credit utilization ratio drops significantly. Credit utilization is 30% of your FICO score, and lower is better. The net result for most people who execute a balance transfer correctly: a small temporary dip followed by improvement as utilization drops and on-time payments accumulate. The single biggest mistake after a transfer: closing the old card. Closing a card reduces your total available credit and your credit history length โ both harmful to your score. Leave it open, use it occasionally for a small charge, and pay it in full.
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Can I transfer a balance from the same bank to a new card? No โ this is a universal hard rule ยท Chase to Chase: not allowed ยท Citi to Citi: not allowed ยท Bank of America to Bank of America: not allowed ยท The new card must always be from a completely different financial institutionEvery major U.S. card issuer prohibits same-bank balance transfers โ it is written into the terms of every promotional offer. If your high-rate card is from Chase, your balance transfer must go to Citi, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, U.S. Bank, Discover, or another non-Chase issuer. This also applies across product lines within the same bank โ you cannot move a Chase Freedom balance to a Chase Slate, even though they are different cards. The reason issuers do this is straightforward: they would lose the interest income on debt they already hold. Navy Federal Credit Union extends this rule to exclude its own cards and home equity lines โ any transfer must come from a non-Navy Federal account. Additionally, you generally cannot transfer a personal loan, student loan, auto loan, or mortgage to a credit card balance transfer โ only credit card balances at most issuers, though some credit unions are more flexible on this point if you call and ask.
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Is the 3% balance transfer fee worth paying or not? Almost always yes, when you’re paying 18%+ on your current card ยท On a $5,000 balance: 3% fee = $150 upfront ยท At 22% APR, you’d pay $148 in interest in the first month alone ยท The fee pays for itself in weeks, not monthsPeople see “3% fee” and hesitate. That hesitation is expensive. At 22% APR, every $5,000 you carry costs you roughly $148 in interest the very first month. A 3% balance transfer fee on that same $5,000 is $150 โ a one-time cost that is covered by the first month of avoided interest. From month two onward, everything is savings. The calculus only changes if your current card’s interest rate is very low (under 8โ10%) โ in which case the fee might exceed what you’d pay in interest anyway. For anyone carrying a balance at the typical 20%โ25% range, the fee math is not even close. One real scenario where paying the fee is avoidable: if you have military affiliation and qualify for Navy Federal Credit Union, their Platinum card has a $0 transfer fee. If you can pay off the debt within 12 months, the no-fee credit union option wins. If you need longer, the fee is worth paying to access a 21โ24 month window.
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What credit score do I actually need to get approved? Good to excellent credit required: most cards need 670+ FICO ยท 21โ24 month cards typically go to applicants at 720+ ยท Use soft-inquiry pre-approval tools before applying โ available at Wells Fargo, Citi, Chase, and Bank of America’s websites ยท Below 670: contact NFCC for a debt management plan instead of applyingThe longest 0% windows โ 24 months at U.S. Bank Shield, 21 months at Wells Fargo and Citi โ typically require FICO scores of 700 or above for full approval at the best terms. Applicants with scores in the 670โ700 range may be approved but at a higher post-intro APR or a shorter promo window. Discover it and Citi Double Cash are somewhat more accessible to applicants in the good-credit range. Before you apply for anything, use the pre-qualification tool โ these check your eligibility without triggering a hard inquiry on your credit report. Wells Fargo, Citi, Bank of America, and Chase all offer these tools on their websites. A hard inquiry from an application you don’t get approved for costs you points and gets you nothing. Check first, apply second.
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I have multiple high-rate cards. Can I transfer all of them at once? Often yes โ up to your new card’s credit limit ยท You can consolidate multiple cards onto one 0% card ยท Transfer deadline applies to all of them: typically 60โ120 days from account opening ยท You cannot consolidate two cards from the same issuer onto one of their own cardsMultiple balance transfers to a single new card are allowed at most issuers โ the only limit is your approved credit line. If you’re approved for a $12,000 credit limit and want to transfer $4,000 from one card and $5,000 from another, you can do both. The sum ($9,000) just needs to fall within your available credit. Some issuers let you initiate multiple transfers in a single online session; others require a phone call. Either way, all transfers need to happen within the promotional window (60โ120 days) to qualify for the 0% rate. The one hard restriction: if two of your high-rate cards are from the same issuer, you cannot transfer both to a new card from that same issuer. A $4,000 Chase balance and a $5,000 Discover balance can both go to a Citi card; two Chase balances cannot both go to a Chase card.
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What should I do with the old card after the balance transfers? Keep it open โ do not close it ยท Closing reduces your available credit and your average account age, both of which lower your credit score ยท Use it once every few months for a small purchase and pay in full ยท If the card has an annual fee, call to downgrade it to a no-fee versionThis is the step most people skip that ends up costing them. When your balance transfers off an old card, the temptation is to cut it up and close the account. Don’t. A closed account reduces your total available credit โ which raises your credit utilization ratio on your remaining cards. It also removes a portion of your credit history when the account eventually falls off your report (typically 10 years for closed accounts in good standing, 7 for derogatory items). Instead: keep the card open, put a small recurring charge on it (one streaming subscription, one utility bill), and pay that charge in full each month. This costs you nothing, keeps the account active, and preserves your credit history. If the old card carries an annual fee, call the issuer and ask to downgrade it to a no-fee product โ most banks have one. This preserves your credit line and history without the ongoing cost.
Every card below has no annual fee. Listed roughly from longest to shorter 0% intro window. Verify all current terms directly with the issuer before applying โ offers change frequently and your approved terms depend on your individual credit profile.
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U.S. Bank Shieldโข Visaยฎ โ Longest Window on the Market0% period: 24 billing cycles on both purchases and balance transfers ยท Transfer fee: 5% ($5 min) ยท Transfer deadline: 60 days from account opening ยท Regular APR after intro: 16.99%โ27.99% Variable ยท Annual fee: $0 ยท Bonus perks: 4% cash back on prepaid travel through U.S. Bank Travel Center ยท $20 annual statement credit for 11 consecutive months of purchases ยท Up to $600 cell phone protection against theft or damage ยท Best for: Larger balances that need the most time possible โ this is currently the only major card offering 24 months at 0%โฑ๏ธ 24 months โ current leaderโ๏ธ 4% travel cash back โ rare for BT card๐ฑ Cell phone protection includedโ ๏ธ 60-day transfer window โ don’t wait
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Wells Fargo Reflectยฎ โ Best-Known 21-Month Option0% period: 21 months on both purchases and balance transfers from account opening ยท Transfer fee: 5% ($5 min) ยท Transfer deadline: 120 days from account opening โ the longest transfer window of any card on this list ยท Regular APR after intro: 17.49%, 23.99%, or 28.24% Variable ยท Annual fee: $0 ยท Standout: 120-day transfer window gives you the most time to consolidate balances from multiple cards without racing to meet a 60-day deadline. Includes up to $600 cell phone protection. ยท Best for: People with balances spread across several cards who need time to organize and transfer everythingโฑ๏ธ 21 months๐ 120-day transfer window โ most generous๐ฑ Cell phone protection included๐ซ No rewards program
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Citiยฎ Diamond Preferredยฎ โ 21 Months, Lower Intro Fee0% period: 21 months on balance transfers ยท 12 months on purchases ยท Transfer fee: 3% intro fee for first 4 months, then 5% ยท Transfer deadline: 4 months from account opening for the 3% fee ยท Regular APR after intro: 16.49%โ27.24% Variable ยท Annual fee: $0 ยท Key advantage: On a $9,000 transfer, paying the 3% fee within 4 months vs. the 5% standard fee saves $180 on day one. The ongoing APR floor of 16.49% is lower than most national card competitors. ยท Best for: Anyone who can initiate the transfer quickly and wants to reduce the upfront fee cost on a large balanceโฑ๏ธ 21 months on transfers๐ฐ 3% fee in first 4 months โ saves $180 on $9k๐ 16.49% APR floor โ lower than mostโ ๏ธ Only 12 months on purchases
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Citi Simplicityยฎ โ Best Protection for Occasional Late Payers0% period: 18 months on balance transfers AND purchases (recently updated from 21 months on transfers) ยท Transfer fee: 3% intro fee for first 4 months, then 5% ยท Transfer deadline: 4 months from account opening ยท Regular APR after intro: 18.49%โ29.24% Variable ยท Annual fee: $0 ยท The standout that matters most: No late fees. No penalty APR. Ever. On every other card in this list, one missed payment can trigger 29.99% penalty APR that voids your 0% period. Citi Simplicity is the only card here where a late payment simply results in a credit bureau report (if 30+ days) โ not a rate change. For seniors, caregivers, or anyone managing multiple bills and medications, this protection is worth more than an extra 3 months of promo time.โฑ๏ธ 18 months (transfers + purchases)๐ก๏ธ No late fees โ ever, on any payment๐ก๏ธ No penalty APR โ ever, under any circumstancesโ ๏ธ Updated: 18 months (was 21 on transfers)
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Chase Slateยฎ โ Best From Chase, Strong Fraud Protection0% period: 21 months on both purchases and balance transfers ยท Transfer fee: 5% ($5 min) ยท Transfer deadline: 60 days from account opening ยท Regular APR after intro: 18.24%โ28.24% Variable ยท Annual fee: $0 ยท Perks: Chase Zero Liability protection for unauthorized charges. Access to Chase Credit Journey โ free FICO score monitoring with real-time alerts. Option to earn up to 2 percentage points of APR reduction per year by paying on time and spending $1,000 annually on the card โ meaningful if you carry any balance past the promo period. ยท Best for: Existing Chase customers who prefer one banking relationshipโฑ๏ธ 21 months๐ก๏ธ Zero Liability fraud protection๐ APR can drop 2%/year with good behaviorโ ๏ธ 60-day transfer window
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BankAmericardยฎ โ Best for Lowest Post-Intro APR + No Penalty Rate0% period: 21 billing cycles on both purchases and balance transfers ยท Transfer fee: 3% intro for first 60 days, then 4% (note: 4%, not 5% โ lower than most) ยท Transfer deadline: 60 days from account opening ยท Regular APR after intro: 14.99%โ25.99% Variable ยท Annual fee: $0 ยท Two standout features: The ongoing APR floor of 14.99% is the lowest of any major bank card here โ applicants with excellent credit can land in the mid-teens. No penalty APR, just like Citi Simplicity โ a late payment won’t trigger a rate spike. ยท Best for: People with excellent credit who may not fully pay off the balance and want the lowest possible rate when the promo endsโฑ๏ธ 21 months๐ 14.99% APR floor โ lowest of any major bank card here๐ก๏ธ No penalty APR๐ฐ 4% fee after 60 days (not 5%) โ slightly lower
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Citi Double Cashยฎ โ Best When You Want Cash Back After Paying Off Debt0% period: 18 months on balance transfers ยท Transfer fee: 3% intro fee for first 4 months, then 5% ยท Regular APR after intro: 18.49%โ28.49% Variable ยท Annual fee: $0 ยท Caution: While your transfer is at 0%, Citi will charge interest on new purchases immediately โ no grace period โ if any transferred balance remains. Keep a separate card for daily spending while you pay down the transfer. ยท The long-game value: 2% cash back on everything โ 1% when you buy, 1% when you pay. After the balance is gone, this becomes one of the best flat-rate cash back cards available. ยท Best for: People who can fully pay off in 18 months and want a card worth keeping foreverโฑ๏ธ 18 months on transfers๐ฐ 2% cash back on everything โ best keeper cardโ ๏ธ No grace period on purchases during transfer payoff๐ซ Keep separate card for daily spending
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Discover itยฎ Cash Back โ Best First-Year Rewards Match0% period: 18 months on balance transfers and purchases ยท Transfer fee: 3% intro fee ยท Regular APR after intro: 17.49%โ26.49% Variable ยท Annual fee: $0 ยท First-year bonus: Discover matches every dollar of cash back you earn in your first year โ automatically, with no cap. 5% back on rotating quarterly categories (gas, groceries, restaurants, online shopping, etc.), 1% on everything else. ยท Note: This card has no foreign transaction fee and no penalty for your first late payment (though subsequent late payments may be charged). ยท Best for: Disciplined spenders who will activate rotating categories and pay those purchases in full, while separately managing the transfer paydownโฑ๏ธ 18 months๐ First-year cash back match โ unlimited๐ฐ 5% rotating categories each quarterโ ๏ธ Must activate rotating categories each quarter
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Chase Freedom Unlimitedยฎ โ Best Combo of Rewards and Decent Window0% period: 15 months on purchases and balance transfers from account opening ยท Transfer fee: 3% intro fee for first 60 days, then 5% ยท Regular APR after intro: 18.24%โ27.74% Variable ยท Annual fee: $0 ยท Rewards: 5% on Chase Travel, 3% on dining and drugstores, 1.5% on everything else. $200 bonus after $500 spend in first 3 months. ยท Real talk: 15 months is on the shorter side โ only right for people confident they can clear the balance in that window. If you need more time, the window is too tight. ยท Best for: Smaller balances ($3,000โ$5,000) where 15 months is enough, plus a strong everyday card for the long runโฑ๏ธ 15 months โ shorter, be sure it’s enough๐ฐ 1.5โ5% cash back โ strong everyday card๐ $200 bonus after $500 spendโ ๏ธ Only for balances you can clear in 15 months
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Bank of Americaยฎ Customized Cash Rewards โ Best BofA Card With Category Rewards0% period: 18 billing cycles on purchases and balance transfers within the first 60 days ยท Transfer fee: 3% intro for first 60 days, then 5% ยท Regular APR after intro: Variable (see issuer site) ยท Annual fee: $0 ยท Rewards: 3% cash back in the category of your choice (rotate monthly: dining, online shopping, travel, gas, home improvement). 2% at grocery stores and warehouse clubs. 1% everywhere else. ยท Best for: People with heavy spending in one specific category who want the card to earn seriously after the balance is clearedโฑ๏ธ 18 months๐ฐ 3% in chosen category โ change monthly๐ 2% at grocery stores + warehouse clubsโ ๏ธ 60-day window for balance transfers
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Navy Federal Credit Union Platinum โ Best True No-Fee Transfer Card0% period: 0.99% intro APR (near-zero, not technically 0%) for 12 months on balance transfers ยท Transfer fee: $0 โ no transfer fee whatsoever ยท Transfer deadline: 60 days from account opening ยท Regular APR after intro: 10.24%โ18.00% Variable โ one of the lowest ongoing APR ceilings of any card in this guide ยท Annual fee: $0 ยท Membership: Requires military affiliation โ active duty, veterans, National Guard, DoD civilians, or qualifying family members ยท Best for: Veterans and military families who can pay off the balance in 12 months โ the zero transfer fee and low ongoing rate are unmatched by any major bank card๐ซ $0 transfer fee โ no fee at all๐ 10.24%โ18% ongoing APR โ lowest ceiling here๐๏ธ Military/veterans/DoD families onlyโ ๏ธ 12-month window โ need ~$550/mo to clear $6k
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Capital One Quicksilver Cash Rewards โ Best Simple Flat-Rate Everyday Card0% period: 15 months on purchases and balance transfers ยท Transfer fee: 3% for first 15 months, then no fee after that (rare structure) ยท Regular APR after intro: Variable (see issuer site) ยท Annual fee: $0 ยท Rewards: 1.5% cash back on everything, always โ no categories, no tracking, no activation needed. ยท Who it’s really for: People who want the simplest possible card structure โ no rotating categories, no portals, no activation steps. Pay and earn, every time. Decent for smaller balances where 15 months is sufficient. ยท Best for: Simplicity-first spenders who want a card that earns without effort for lifeโฑ๏ธ 15 months๐ฐ 1.5% flat rate โ no tracking required, everโ No categories, no portals, no activationโ ๏ธ 15 months only โ for smaller, manageable balances
Enter your numbers below. This calculator shows the interest you’d pay by staying on your current card versus the cost of doing a balance transfer โ so you can decide whether the math makes sense before applying.
- Step 1 โ Know your exact balance and current APR before doing anything. Log into your current card account and write down: the exact balance, your current interest rate, and the minimum monthly payment. This is your baseline for every comparison you make. Don’t skip this โ people consistently underestimate their actual balance.
- Step 2 โ Use pre-approval tools before applying. Wells Fargo, Citi, Bank of America, Chase, and Capital One all offer soft-inquiry pre-qualification on their websites. These show your approval odds without touching your credit score. A declined application costs you 3โ5 points for nothing โ check eligibility first.
- Step 3 โ Apply and immediately initiate the transfer. Don’t wait to receive the physical card. Initiate the balance transfer during the application or through your online account the day you’re approved. The 60โ120 day window starts at account opening, not card receipt โ the clock is already ticking.
- Step 4 โ Keep making minimum payments on the old card until you confirm the transfer cleared. Transfers take 5โ21 business days. Missing a payment on your old card while waiting is a separate mistake โ it adds fees, a credit score hit, and possible penalty APR on the old card. Confirm the old balance reads zero before stopping payments.
- Step 5 โ Set up autopay for at least the minimum payment immediately. This is your insurance policy. Every card except Citi Simplicity will end your 0% period if you miss a payment. Autopay for the minimum takes 3 minutes to set up online and prevents an accidental late payment from undoing months of savings.
- Step 6 โ Do not use the balance transfer card for new spending. New purchases on most transfer cards accrue interest at the full variable APR immediately โ not the 0% rate. Keep a different card or debit card for everyday purchases. The transfer card is a debt-payoff tool, not a spending card, for the duration of the 0% period.
- Missing one payment. On all cards except Citi Simplicity and BankAmericard, a single missed payment triggers penalty APR โ often 29.99% โ that ends your 0% period immediately. Set autopay on the same day you receive the card.
- Transferring more than you can realistically pay off, then doing nothing about the remainder. When month 22 arrives and $3,000 is still sitting there at 28% APR, it compounds fast. Either plan for the remaining balance before month 21, or shop for a second transfer card at that point.
- Closing the old card right after the balance transfers. It feels satisfying to close a card you no longer owe on. Don’t do it. Closing a card reduces your available credit and compresses your credit history, both of which lower your score. Leave it open with a small recurring charge paid in full monthly.
If your balance is very large or your credit score makes approval uncertain, speaking with a nonprofit credit counselor is worth doing before applying for anything. It’s free, no-pressure, and they often surface options that aren’t visible from a Google search.
- Largest balance, most time needed โ U.S. Bank Shield (24 months) or Wells Fargo Reflect (21 months, 120-day transfer window)
- You worry about missing payments โ Citi Simplicity (18 months, no penalty APR, no late fees โ ever)
- You want the lowest post-intro APR if any balance remains โ BankAmericard (14.99% floor, no penalty APR)
- Military or veteran โ Navy Federal Platinum ($0 transfer fee, 10.24%โ18% ongoing APR)
- You want ongoing rewards after the debt is gone โ Citi Double Cash (2% on everything) or U.S. Bank Shield (4% travel + annual credit)
- Credit score under 670 โ Skip applying; contact NFCC at nfcc.org for a Debt Management Plan โ negotiated rates without a new credit application
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or credit advice. Credit card terms, APRs, introductory periods, transfer fees, and eligibility requirements change frequently. All card details reflect publicly available information โ always verify terms directly with each card issuer before applying. Not affiliated with any financial institution referenced. Credit card applications result in hard inquiries that may temporarily lower your credit score.