How to Read Your Credit Card Statement (and Spot Errors)
A credit card statement has 30+ line items. Here's what each one means and which ones to verify.
Isha Patel
Tax-and-billing specialist. Writes about GST on annual fees, late fees, and EMI conversions.
The 30+ line items on a typical statement
A standard Indian credit-card statement contains more detail than most cardholders ever read. Every number matters — for dispute purposes, for tax filing, for credit-score monitoring.
The top section: account summary
- Statement date: the date the statement was generated.
- Payment due date: typically 18–25 days after the statement date.
- Total amount due: pay this to avoid interest and stay current.
- Minimum amount due: typically 5% of outstanding or ₹200–₹500, whichever is higher. Paying only this is the start of a debt spiral.
- Credit limit: your maximum spend.
- Available credit limit: your remaining spend capacity.
- Available cash limit: typically 20%–40% of credit limit. Avoid using this.
- Statement balance: what you owed on the statement date. The number that matters for rewards and grace periods.
- Previous balance: the balance carried over from the previous statement.
- Payment received since last statement: payments credited since the last statement.
- Past due amount: any amount carried over from a missed payment.
The transaction section
Each transaction row shows:
- Date: transaction date (the date you made the purchase).
- Description: merchant name and city.
- MCC: merchant category code (a 4-digit code for the merchant's industry).
- Amount in INR: the rupee value of the transaction.
- Reward points earned: points credited for the transaction.
- Reward points redeemed: any points debited.
For international transactions, there may be additional columns:
- Original currency: e.g. USD, EUR.
- Original amount: e.g. $50.
- Exchange rate: the rate applied.
- Forex markup: the bank's cross-currency fee.
The interest and fee section
- Finance charge: interest charged on carried balances.
- GST on finance charge: 18% on the finance charge.
- Late fee: charged if you missed the minimum due.
- GST on late fee: 18% on the late fee.
- Annual fee: posted on the statement after the card anniversary.
- GST on annual fee: 18% on the annual fee.
- Cash advance fee: charged on cash withdrawals.
- GST on cash advance fee: 18%.
- Over-limit fee: charged if you exceeded your credit limit.
- GST on over-limit fee: 18%.
The reward points section
- Opening balance: rewards carried over from the previous statement.
- Earned this statement: rewards earned on transactions in this cycle.
- Redeemed this statement: rewards used for vouchers, statement credit, or transfers.
- Expired this statement: rewards that lapsed during the cycle.
- Closing balance: rewards remaining at the end of the cycle.
- Expiry date: when the closing balance expires (if applicable).
The contact section
- Customer service number: 24×7 helpline.
- Nodal Officer: for escalated complaints.
- Banking Ombudsman contact: RBI's escalation path.
The verification section: what to check
Every month, verify:
- All transactions are yours. Cross-reference with your records (UPI app, bank account).
- The reward points earned match your spend. 5% cashback on Amazon should appear as 5% of Amazon spend, not a different number.
- No double-billing. A transaction should appear once, not twice.
- MCCs are correct. A dining transaction should show MCC 5812, not 5999.
- The closing balance is right. Total payments + new spend = new balance.
Common errors to spot
- Duplicate transactions: the merchant or the network may have processed the same transaction twice.
- Wrong amount: a transaction of ₹3,000 may show as ₹30,000 (extra zero).
- Wrong currency conversion: an international transaction should show the original currency and exchange rate.
- Missed transactions: a transaction you made is missing from the statement.
- Points not credited: a transaction that should have earned points shows zero or wrong.
How to dispute an error
- Hotlist the card if fraud is suspected. The bank's 24×7 helpline is on every statement.
- File a written dispute. Most bank apps have a "Dispute" form. Include the transaction details, the date you noticed the error, and any evidence.
- Reference the RBI's dispute resolution timeline. Banks must acknowledge within 3 days and resolve within 90 days.
- Escalate to the Nodal Officer if the dispute isn't resolved within 30 days.
- Escalate to the Banking Ombudsman if neither the bank nor the Nodal Officer resolves within 90 days.
When to ignore small discrepancies
Banks sometimes round transactions to the nearest rupee. A $1.00 transaction at ₹84.50 might show as ₹84.49 or ₹84.51. This is normal rounding, not an error.
Similarly, the reward points earned may round up or down by 1–2 points depending on the bank's calculation. Don't dispute over ₹0.50 or 1 point.
The bottom line
A credit-card statement is a contract document. Every line matters for tax filing, dispute resolution, and credit-score monitoring. Read it monthly. Cross-reference transactions with your records. Dispute errors within 7 days. Most errors are bank reporting mistakes that are quickly corrected; some are signs of fraud that require immediate hotlisting. The 5 minutes spent reading your statement every month is the cheapest fraud-prevention tool available.