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Every Credit Card Fee Explained in Plain English

Every Credit Card Fee Explained in Plain English

Annual fee, late fee, finance charge, cash advance fee, EMI fee — what each one is, when it applies, and what it costs.

Tanvi Deshpande

Beginner-friendly explainers. Translates the bank's T&Cs into plain English for first-card users.

5 June 2026
5 min read

The fees you'll meet on day one

When you get a credit card, you'll encounter a dozen different fees in the first year. Some you can avoid; others are inevitable. Knowing what each one is — and when it applies — is the first step to keeping costs low.

Annual fee

What it is: a yearly fee charged on your card anniversary.

Typical amount: ₹0 (lifetime free) to ₹12,500 (super-premium).

When it applies: every year, on the anniversary of the card's issuance. Most cards waive the fee if you hit a spend threshold (e.g. ₹3L spend = ₹2,500 fee waived on HDFC Regalia).

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How to avoid: hit the spend threshold, request a goodwill waiver, or downgrade to a lower-fee card.

Joining fee

What it is: a one-time fee charged when you first activate the card.

Typical amount: ₹0 to ₹10,000 (most cards waive this with a first-year promotional offer).

When it applies: typically the first statement after activation.

How to avoid: pick a card with no joining fee, or hit the first-year waiver threshold.

Finance charge (interest)

What it is: interest charged on a carried-over balance.

Typical amount: 3.5%–4.25% per month (42%–51% per annum before GST).

When it applies: any month in which you don't pay the full statemented balance.

How to avoid: pay the statemented balance in full every cycle. The finance charge is the most expensive credit-card fee; avoid it.

Late fee

What it is: a flat fee charged when you miss the minimum payment.

Typical amount: ₹100 to ₹1,200 (capped under the RBI's 2024 rules).

When it applies: if you don't pay at least the minimum amount due by the due date.

How to avoid: set up auto-pay for the full statemented balance. The bank will never miss a payment.

Over-limit fee

What it is: a fee charged when your balance exceeds your credit limit.

Typical amount: ₹500 to ₹1,200 per cycle.

When it applies: if a transaction pushes your balance above the credit limit.

How to avoid: request a credit-limit increase before the cycle. Monitor your balance in the app.

Cash advance fee

What it is: a fee for withdrawing cash from an ATM using your credit card.

Typical amount: 2.5%–3.5% of the cash amount (minimum ₹250–₹500).

When it applies: every cash advance. Plus interest at 2.5%–3.5% per month from day one.

How to avoid: don't take cash advances. Use a debit card at ATMs or a personal loan for cash needs.

Foreign currency markup

What it is: a surcharge on international transactions.

Typical amount: 1% to 3.5% of the transaction value.

When it applies: any transaction in a foreign currency (online or in-person).

How to avoid: use a 0% forex markup card (HDFC Infinia, Diners Club Black) for international spend. Or use a forex card (prepaid, locked-in rate).

EMI processing fee

What it is: a fee for converting a purchase to EMI.

Typical amount: 1% to 2% of the EMI principal.

When it applies: when you opt to convert a transaction to EMI.

How to avoid: pay in full when possible. EMI is only worth it when you're already revolving and need to stop the compounding interest.

Card replacement fee

What it is: a fee for replacing a lost, stolen, or damaged card.

Typical amount: ₹100 to ₹500 per replacement.

When it applies: when you request a new card outside the renewal cycle.

How to avoid: protect your card physically. The fee is rarely waived except for lost/stolen cards.

PIN regeneration fee

What it is: a fee for re-issuing a forgotten PIN.

Typical amount: ₹50 to ₹200.

When it applies: when you request a new PIN outside the original issuance.

How to avoid: most banks allow PIN regeneration through the app for free. The fee applies to physical PIN mailers only.

Cheque return fee

What it is: a fee when a cheque payment bounces.

Typical amount: ₹250 to ₹500.

When it applies: when you pay your credit-card bill by cheque and the cheque bounces.

How to avoid: pay via UPI, NEFT, or auto-debit. Cheques are obsolete for credit-card payments.

Reward redemption fee

What it is: a fee when you redeem reward points for some categories (e.g. vouchers, products).

Typical amount: ₹0 to ₹50 per redemption.

When it applies: varies by card. Most cards don't charge a redemption fee for statement credit.

How to avoid: redeem as statement credit, not as vouchers or products. Statement credit is usually free.

Add-on card fee

What it is: a fee for each add-on card on your primary account.

Typical amount: ₹0 to ₹500 per add-on card per year.

When it applies: when you add a family member's add-on card.

How to avoid: most banks issue add-on cards free if the primary card has an annual fee above ₹5,000.

GST on fees

What it is: 18% GST added to every fee.

Typical amount: 18% of the fee.

When it applies: every fee is subject to GST.

How to avoid: GST is unavoidable. The bank collects it and remits to the government.

The fee waiver script

For most fees, a goodwill waiver is possible:

  • Annual fee: "I've been a customer for [X] years. I'd like to request a goodwill waiver of the renewal fee."
  • Late fee: "I usually pay on time. This was a one-off. I'd like to request a courtesy reversal."
  • Over-limit fee: "It was a single transaction. I've paid the over-limit balance. I'd like to request a reversal."

Banks will often waive fees for long-term customers or first-time occurrences. The script is short, polite, and direct.

The fee comparison by card type

FeeLifetime-free cardMid-premium cardSuper-premium card
Annual fee₹0₹2,500–₹5,000₹10,000–₹12,500
Joining fee₹0₹0–₹2,500₹5,000–₹10,000
Finance charge3.5%–4.25%/month3.5%–4.25%/month3.5%–4.25%/month
Late fee₹500–₹1,200₹500–₹1,200₹500–₹1,200
Cash advance2.5%–3.5%2.5%–3.5%2.5%–3.5%
Forex markup2%–3.5%1.5%–2%0%
EMI fee1%–2%1%–2%1%–2%

The right card for your discipline

If you're disciplined (pay in full every cycle):

  • Lifetime-free cards are fine. Save the annual fee.

If you're average (sometimes carry a balance):

  • Mid-premium cards. The annual fee is offset by the rewards.

If you're high-spend (always pay in full, big travel):

  • Super-premium cards. The annual fee is offset by 0% forex, lounge access, and concierge.

The bottom line

Credit-card fees are predictable. Annual fee, late fee, cash advance fee, EMI fee — each has a typical range and a way to avoid it. The single most expensive fee is the finance charge (42%–51% per annum); avoid by paying in full every cycle. The single most-avoidable fee is the annual fee; most banks waive it for active customers. Know the fees, avoid the finance charge, and request waivers for the rest. The discipline pays.

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