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Credit Utilization Calculator

Add up your cards to see how much of your available credit you’re using — overall and per card.

Card 1

Add each card's limit and balance, then Calculate to see your overall and per-card utilization.

Guide

How the Credit Utilization Calculator works

Credit utilization is how much of your available credit you are using — your balances measured against your credit limits. This calculator adds up your cards to show your overall utilization, the figure that carries the most weight, alongside the rate on each individual card. Enter a limit and a balance for each card and you will see where you stand and which cards are pulling the number up.

What it tells you

Two things come back. Your overall utilization is your total balance divided by your total limit across every card — the aggregate that lenders and credit scores read. Each card also gets its own rate, so you can see whether one card is running hot even when the overall figure looks fine. Both are rated on a simple scale, with 30% marked as the common guideline.

Why utilization matters

Your credit score

Utilization is one of the largest inputs to a credit score, close behind whether you pay on time. Scores read both your overall utilization and the rate on each card, so a single maxed-out card can weigh on you even when your total looks reasonable. A high rate suggests you are leaning heavily on credit, which lenders treat as a sign of stretched finances. Utilization also has no memory: it reflects your latest reported balances, so paying a card down can lift the number quickly, unlike a late payment that lingers for years.

Very low utilization is good, but a flat 0% across every card is a mixed signal. A card you never use gives a lender little evidence that you can borrow and repay it, and an unused card can eventually be closed by the issuer, which lowers your total limit and nudges every other card’s share up. A small charge you clear each month keeps a card active and shows the steady use scores reward.

Your headroom

Utilization is also a plain read on how much room you have left. A high rate means you are near the ceiling on your cards, with less to fall back on for an unexpected cost and a real chance of hitting the limit, where a declined purchase or an over-limit fee waits. Seeing the number is the first step. From there the choice is to pay balances down or ease your spending, and either is easier to plan once you know how close to the edge you are.

Assumptions & Limitations

This is a snapshot of the figures you enter. The balance that reaches your credit report is usually the one on your statement closing date, not today’s, so your reported utilization can differ from what you see here depending on timing — paying a card down before the statement closes is what lowers the number that gets reported.

The 30% guideline is a rule of thumb, not a cliff edge. There is no single cutoff, and lower is generally better. Utilization is one factor among several, so a comfortable number here does not tell the whole story of a credit profile. Only revolving accounts like credit cards count toward it — installment debts such as a car loan or a mortgage are measured differently and are not part of this calculation.

Calculator Inputs

  • Credit limit: The card’s limit, the most the issuer lets you borrow on it. You will find it on your statement or in your online account.
  • Balance: What you currently owe on the card. Enter 0 for a card you hold but do not carry a balance on — keeping it in the list still counts its limit toward your total available credit.

Understanding Your Results

The headline is your overall utilization: your total balance across all cards as a share of your total limit. Below it, each card shows its own rate and where it lands on the scale, so a card running hotter than the rest stands out. The colored bar and the 30% marker give you a quick read — green is comfortable, amber is worth watching and red calls for attention.

If your overall number looks fine but one card is high, that card is usually the first place to focus, since scores weigh individual cards too. And because utilization updates as balances change, a payment you make this month can show up in your score as soon as the new balance is reported.

The results provided by this online calculator are for informational purposes only and do not constitute financial advice. The actual rates, terms and amounts that apply to you may vary based on your provider, your credit profile and the specifics of your situation. This calculator may not account for every factor that affects the total cost, such as fees, taxes, changing rates or other charges. Please consult a qualified financial professional before making a decision.