Credit Score

Balance Transfers and Your Credit Score: What You Need to Know

Learn how balance transfers affect your credit score, when they make financial sense, and how to use them strategically without hurting your credit.

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FixMyCredit99 Team
(Updated September 25, 2024)
9 min read

Key Takeaways

  • Balance transfers can temporarily lower your score
  • Lower utilization from the transfer often improves score overall
  • Don't close old cards after transferring balances
  • 0% APR periods can save significant interest
  • Have a payoff plan before the promotional rate ends

How Balance Transfers Affect Your Credit

A balance transfer has multiple effects on your credit score, some negative and some positive:

Negative Effects (Short-Term)

  • Hard inquiry: Applying for a new card adds a hard inquiry (-5 to -10 points typically)
  • New account: Lowers your average account age
  • High initial utilization: The new card may be maxed out from the transfer

Positive Effects (Longer-Term)

  • Lower overall utilization: More total available credit can lower your utilization ratio
  • Easier to pay down: 0% APR means all payment goes to principal
  • Consolidated debt: Easier to manage and track

Typical Credit Impact

  • Hard inquiry: -5 to -10 points
  • New account age: Minor impact
  • Lower utilization: +10 to +30 points
  • Net effect: Often positive after 1-2 months

The Math Usually Works Out

If a balance transfer increases your total available credit, the utilization benefit often outweighs the hard inquiry penalty within a month or two—especially if you're paying down the balance.

When Balance Transfers Make Sense

Pros

  • High-interest debt you can pay off during 0% period
  • Good enough credit to qualify for 0% APR cards
  • Committed to not using old cards for new debt
  • Transfer fee (3-5%) is less than interest you'd pay
  • Need breathing room to pay down debt faster

Cons

  • Won't pay off balance before promotional rate ends
  • Might continue spending on old cards
  • Balance transfer fee exceeds interest savings
  • Don't have a payoff plan
  • Already have too many recent credit applications

Balance Transfer Strategy

  1. Calculate Your Savings

    Compare interest you'd pay on current cards vs. the balance transfer fee. A 3% fee on a $5,000 transfer is $150. If you'd pay $500+ in interest, the transfer makes sense.

  2. Check Your Credit First

    You'll need good credit (typically 670+) for the best 0% APR offers. Check your credit reports for errors that might affect approval before applying.

  3. Choose the Right Card

    Look for: longest 0% intro period, lowest balance transfer fee (some have 0% fee offers), and credit limit high enough for your transfer.

  4. Create a Payoff Plan

    Divide your balance by the number of promotional months. That's your monthly payment goal. Automate it so you don't miss the deadline.

  5. Don't Close Old Cards

    Keep old accounts open to maintain your available credit and account age. Put a small recurring charge on them to keep them active.

  6. Stop New Spending

    Don't use the new card for purchases—they may not have 0% APR. And don't rack up new debt on old cards. The goal is to pay down, not accumulate.

Mistakes to Avoid

Balance Transfer Pitfalls

  • Not paying off during 0% period: Rates jump to 15-25% after promotion ends
  • Making purchases on the transfer card: New purchases may have regular APR and different payment allocation
  • Missing payments: Can cancel your 0% rate entirely
  • Closing old cards: Hurts utilization and account age
  • Transfer cycling: Repeatedly transferring without paying down damages credit

Know Your Deadline

Mark your calendar for when the 0% period ends. If you haven't paid off the balance by then, the remaining amount will start accruing interest at the regular APR (often 15-25%). Some cards even charge deferred interest retroactively.

Cleaning Up Your Credit Before Applying?

Better credit means better balance transfer offers. Our platform helps you identify and dispute errors that may be limiting your approval odds.

Frequently Asked Questions

Initially, yes—the hard inquiry and new account can cause a small temporary dip. However, if the transfer lowers your overall utilization, your score often improves within 1-2 months.
Generally no. Closing the old card reduces your available credit, increasing your utilization ratio. Keep it open with occasional small purchases to maintain the account.
There's no hard limit, but each application is a hard inquiry. Too many new accounts can hurt your credit. Most people should limit transfers to when they'll genuinely save money.
The remaining balance will start accruing interest at the regular APR (often 15-25%). Some cards charge deferred interest retroactively. Consider another transfer or aggressive paydown strategy.
Usually no. Most issuers don't allow balance transfers between their own cards. You'll need to transfer to a card from a different bank.

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