Credit Card Charges in India: Every Fee Explained (2026)
Indian banks earn more from credit card fees than from interest. Most cardholders never read the schedule of charges and pay 30–40% more than they need to. Here is every charge, what RBI permits, and how to dispute the ones that aren't.
Quick Answer
- Finance charge (interest): 2.5% to 4.0% per month (= ~30%–48% annualised) — applies if you don't pay full bill by due date.
- Late payment fee: ₹100 to ₹1,300 by slab — RBI capped this from October 2024.
- Annual fee: free–₹15,000+ (waivable on most cards if you spend ₹1.5–3 lakh a year).
- Foreign transaction markup: 1.5%–3.5% — required by RBI to be disclosed.
- Cash advance fee: 2.5%–3% per withdrawal + finance charge from day 1.
- GST 18% is added on every fee (mandatory under CGST/SGST).
- All charges must be in the MITC (Most Important Terms & Conditions) — RBI Master Direction, 2022.
- If a charge is not in MITC, you can dispute it under RBI Charter of Customer Rights.
What RBI Says
The RBI Master Direction — Credit Card and Debit Card – Issuance and Conduct, 2022 (last amended March 2024) governs every fee. Key rules:
- Every issuer must publish the MITC (Section 7).
- Most Important Terms & Conditions (MITC) must be in bold, ≥ 12 pt font, given before card activation.
- Pre-approved cards cannot be activated without explicit consent (Section 6.1).
- Late payment fee can only be charged if minimum amount due is unpaid past 3 days from due date (effective 1 October 2024).
- Surcharges on fuel, railway require issuer disclosure.
- Foreign currency markup must be shown on each transaction.
- Card closure: must be processed in 7 business days of request — failing which the issuer pays ₹500/day penalty to the customer.
- Card upgrade / downgrade: cannot be auto-applied without consent.
Every Charge — What it is and How Much
1. Annual / joining fee
- Charged once on issue, then yearly.
- Range: ₹0 to ₹15,000+.
- Waivable on most cards if annual spend ≥ a threshold (typically ₹1.5–3 lakh).
- Premium / co-branded cards (Diners Club, AmEx Platinum) charge ₹10,000–₹85,000.
- Tip: Negotiate. Call customer care, ask for waiver. Most issuers waive on first request if you spend > threshold.
2. Finance charge (interest on revolving credit)
This is the biggest and least-understood charge.
- Range: 2.5% – 4.0% per month = 30% – 48% per year.
- Triggered when you don't pay the full bill by due date, OR pay only the minimum due.
- Applied from the date of the original transaction, not from due date.
- Compounded daily on most cards.
- Calculated even if you pay 99% of the bill.
Example: ₹1,00,000 bill. Pay ₹95,000 by due date (5,000 short). Most issuers charge interest on the full ₹1,00,000 for the entire billing cycle — typically ₹3,500+ in one month. RBI Master Direction requires this to be disclosed but few cards make it visible.
The fix: pay 100% of statement balance. Or pay nothing. Never pay 50–95%.
3. Late payment fee
RBI capped this from 1 October 2024:
| Statement balance | Max late payment fee |
| Below ₹500 | NIL |
| ₹501 – ₹5,000 | ₹500 |
| ₹5,001 – ₹10,000 | ₹750 |
| ₹10,001 – ₹25,000 | ₹950 |
| ₹25,001 – ₹50,000 | ₹1,100 |
| Above ₹50,000 | ₹1,300 |
Plus GST 18% on the fee.
The trick: even paying ₹100 of the minimum due avoids the late fee (you become “paid”). Set autopay for at least the minimum amount.
4. Cash advance fee
- Cash withdrawal at ATM with credit card.
- Fee: 2.5% – 3% of withdrawal amount, minimum ₹250–₹500.
- Plus: finance charge from day 1 (no grace period).
- Plus: GST.
Avoid completely — almost always cheaper to take a personal loan or use UPI/debit.
5. Foreign transaction markup (FX)
- Range: 1.5% – 3.5% of the rupee equivalent.
- On top of Visa/Mastercard's currency conversion.
- Plus TCS 5% (under FEMA / Liberalised Remittance Scheme) on spends above ₹7 lakh per FY (since 1 October 2023).
- Forex cards are usually cheaper for travel — flat ₹100–₹150 issuance, no markup, lower withdrawal fees.
6. Fuel surcharge
- IOCL/HPCL/BPCL pumps charge 1% surcharge on credit card swipe.
- Most issuers waive this on transactions ₹400–₹4,000.
- Fine print: maximum waiver per cycle (e.g., ₹250 or ₹500). Above that, you pay.
7. EMI conversion fee
- Convert a transaction to EMI: ₹99–₹250 processing fee.
- Plus interest: 12%–24% per annum (lower than finance charge but higher than personal loan).
- Cancellation/foreclosure: 3% of outstanding (RBI capped at 3%).
8. Over-limit fee
- If you spend above credit limit: 2.5%–3% of overlimit amount, min ₹500–₹600.
- Plus GST.
- You can opt out — call customer care and disable “over-limit” feature.
9. Cheque/EMI bounce
- If your auto-debit fails: ₹500–₹600 + GST.
- Plus: bank may charge another ₹200–₹500 for ECS bounce.
10. Statement / paper bill fee
- Most issuers charge ₹50–₹100 for paper statement.
- Switch to e-statement (free).
11. Card replacement fee
- Lost card: ₹100–₹250.
- Express delivery: ₹500–₹1,000.
- Cards stolen and reported online before misuse: free under RBI Customer Liability Framework, 2017.
12. Reward redemption fee
- Many issuers charge ₹99–₹250 per redemption.
- Sometimes per redemption, sometimes annual cap.
- Small print — check before redeeming small reward balances.
13. GST 18%
Charged on every fee above. Mandatory under the Central GST Act + State GST Act. The card issuer cannot waive GST.
What is NOT a Permitted Charge
- “Service tax” — replaced by GST in 2017. If your statement still shows it, dispute.
- “Card lock fee” — RBI Customer Liability Framework, 2017 makes this free.
- “Closure fee” — closing card on customer request must be free; issuer must process in 7 business days.
- “Reissue fee” for damaged card — free if card was issued < 6 months and damage isn't customer fault.
- Charges not in MITC — illegal under RBI Master Direction 2022.
Step-by-Step: How to Dispute a Charge
Step 1 — Read the MITC
- Login to issuer's app or website → Documents → MITC.
- Search the disputed charge.
- If absent OR amount differs → you have a case.
Step 2 — Raise complaint with issuer
- File via app's complaint section OR write to principal nodal officer (every issuer must publish PNO email — RBI requirement).
- Quote: “This charge is not in the MITC, in violation of the RBI Master Direction on Credit Cards, 2022.”
- Attach screenshot of statement + MITC page where the charge should appear.
Step 3 — Wait 30 days
- Issuer must resolve in 30 days (RBI Customer Service Framework).
- If resolved, get the reversal in writing.
- If not resolved or unsatisfied → escalate.
Step 4 — Banking Ombudsman
- File at https://cms.rbi.org.in (Complaint Management System).
- Free, no lawyer required.
- Decision in 30–60 days. Awards up to ₹50 lakh for service deficiencies.
- Ombudsman can order reversal + ₹1 lakh compensation for “mental harassment”.
Step 5 — Consumer Court (if amount disputed > ₹1 lakh)
- File at e-Daakhil. See: Consumer court guide.
- Sue for: refund of charge + interest + compensation + legal costs.
- Most card cases settled at first hearing in 3–6 months.
Common Mistakes
- Paying minimum due — avoids late fee but triggers full finance charge. Counter-productive.
- Using credit card for cash withdrawal — most expensive form of borrowing.
- Auto-debit set for less than full amount — same problem as minimum due.
- Not reading MITC — entire fee schedule is in there.
- Closing without paying outstanding — issuer can't close it; closure request rejected automatically.
- Ignoring SMS for due date — set calendar alert 5 days before.
- Foreign transaction without checking markup — 3% on a ₹2 lakh purchase = ₹6,000.
- Holding 4+ unused cards — annual fees pile up. Close any card not used in 6 months.
FAQs
If I pay the minimum due, am I "safe"?
Only from late fee. Finance charge still applies on the full statement balance, from transaction date. Pay 100% or pay nothing.
Can the issuer increase my limit without my consent?
No. RBI Master Direction Section 6.6 requires explicit consent for any limit change.
Can I close a card without paying ₹0?
You must pay the outstanding amount before closure is processed. But closure itself is free (no closure fee) and must complete within 7 business days (RBI rule).
Is "no-cost EMI" really no-cost?
Usually no. The “discount” the merchant offers gets eaten by the EMI processing fee + GST. Read the breakup carefully.
I disputed a fraud transaction. How long for refund?
RBI Customer Liability Framework, 2017: report within 3 working days = zero liability, refund within 10 days. After 7 days, your liability rises.
Can a credit card be issued to me without my consent?
No. Unsolicited cards are banned (RBI 2008). If activated without consent, you can claim refund of all charges + ₹500/day penalty after the date of complaint.
What's the difference between billing date and due date?
Billing date = when statement is generated. Due date = ~21 days later. Pay before due date to avoid charges.
Can I switch issuer for the same card?
Yes (RBI rule, March 2023). Close existing → apply at new issuer. Network (Visa/Mastercard/Rupay) can be different.
Quick Checklist
- [ ] Read your card's MITC at least once
- [ ] Set autopay = full statement balance (not minimum)
- [ ] Note billing + due date in calendar
- [ ] Track foreign markup before international spend
- [ ] Avoid cash advance entirely
- [ ] Close unused cards (6+ months no spend)
- [ ] Annual fee waiver — call before it's debited
- [ ] Disable “over-limit” feature
Sources
- NCH Helpline: 1915