Skip to main content

Credit card annual fee waiver condition — how does it actually work?

Deepika Vaidyan

Asked 23 May 2026

16

Banks say annual fee is waived if I spend ₹75,000 in the previous year. Does the spend include EMI, wallet loads, and reversals? Please clarify with examples.

5 Answers

23
Rituparna Saikia·4 May 2026

Two things nobody tells you: (1) GST is charged on the annual fee, so a ₹1,000 fee becomes ₹1,180. (2) Reward points usually have an expiry of 2-3 years. Set a calendar reminder to redeem before they lapse.

22
Koel Raval·22 May 2026

On the annual fee — most premium cards waive it if you spend ₹1.5L to ₹3L in the previous year. Wallet loads (Paytm, Amazon Pay balance) usually DON'T count. But utilities, fuel, and grocery do. Spend pattern matters more than absolute number.

10
Tillotama Bhatt·9 Apr 2026

Short answer: no, EMI on credit card is not cheaper than a personal loan for large amounts (>₹50,000). The processing fee (~₹199-₹599) plus the interest (~14-16% reducing) usually adds up to slightly more than a personal loan rate of 11-13%. But for small-ticket EMI (₹10-20K), it is fine.

3
Bhavya Zala·20 Mar 2026

For the fee waiver condition: most banks count only retail purchases, not EMI, wallet loads, or fuel (in some cases). Read the TnC PDF linked at the bottom of the fee-waiver email — it's usually 2-3 paragraphs of fine print that change everything.

0
Ritesh Chaubey·10 May 2026

Honestly, the annual fee is on the higher side. But if you spend consistently on the accelerated categories, the cashback more than offsets it. I did the maths on my own statement last year and came out ahead by about ₹3,200.

Your Answer

Sign in to post your answer and help the community.

Sign in to post

Why sign in? We moderate Q&A to keep it spam-free.