My first credit card bill shocked me - What are these charges?

by meera.bhat 10 Nov 2025, 04:21 pm 1478 views 20 replies

I got my first credit card (Axis MyZone) last month and I just got my first bill. I'm completely shocked and confused by all the charges. My total bill is ₹8,476 but I only spent ₹6,500!

Here's what my bill shows:

  • Total purchases: ₹6,500
  • Late payment fee: ₹800
  • Interest charges: ₹975
  • GST on interest: ₹175.50
  • SMS charges: ₹25

TOTAL: ₹8,476

I'm freaking out because I thought I'd only have to pay ₹6,500! I did pay ₹2,000 on the due date because I didn't have the full amount, and I thought that was okay because the bill said "Minimum amount due: ₹650" which I paid MORE than.

My questions:

  • Late payment fee of ₹800 - I paid ₹2,000 which is more than minimum (₹650), so why am I being charged late fee?
  • Interest of ₹975 - I thought credit cards are interest-free for 45 days? I got the card only 30 days ago!
  • GST on interest - Why am I being charged tax on interest charges? Isn't this double charging?
  • SMS charges - I never asked for SMS alerts, they just send them automatically. Can I disable this?
  • What should I do now? - Should I pay the full ₹8,476 or will there be more charges next month? Can I call the bank and get these charges waived?

I feel like I've been trapped. The card came with "zero joining fee, zero annual fee" but now I'm being hit with all these charges. Is this normal? Did I mess up somewhere?

I'm 22, first credit card, and I'm scared I'm going to end up in debt spiral. Please help me understand what's happening!

EDIT: I just realized the due date was 15th and I paid on 18th. I thought 2-3 days late wouldn't matter since I paid more than minimum. Was I wrong?

1

19 Comments

Oh man, you fell into the classic trap. Let me break this down:

Late fee: You paid AFTER the due date (15th), you paid on 18th. Doesn't matter if you paid more than minimum - you paid LATE. That's ₹800 gone.

Interest: You didn't pay FULL amount by due date. The moment you pay anything less than total outstanding, interest kicks in on the ENTIRE amount from purchase date.

Lesson: ALWAYS pay FULL amount by due date. The minimum payment option is a trap.

1

GST on interest is standard - 18% GST is charged on all financial charges including interest and late fees. It's not double charging, just how taxation works. Unfair, but legal.

0
rajesh.nambiar · 28 Nov 2025, 08:09 pm

The "minimum amount due" should be illegal to display so prominently. It tricks people into debt. Banks make BILLIONS from people paying minimum and getting stuck in interest cycles.

0

CRITICAL RULE NOBODY TELLS YOU: The "minimum amount due" is NOT what you should pay. It's the MINIMUM to avoid account closure. If you pay only minimum (or anything less than full), you lose interest-free period and get charged 3-3.5% PER MONTH (36-42% annually) on EVERYTHING.

4

About the GST on interest - yes it sucks. You pay interest at ~3% per month, then 18% GST on that interest. So if interest is ₹1000, you actually pay ₹1180. That's why your ₹975 became ₹1150 total (₹975 + ₹175 GST).

2

The interest-free period only applies if you pay the FULL amount by the due date. If you pay even ₹1 less, interest is charged on the entire outstanding from the date of each purchase. This is the biggest scam that nobody explains clearly.

1

SMS charges can be disabled by calling customer care, but it's just ₹25. The real issue is the ₹800 late fee and ₹975 interest. That's where you got hit hard.

2

Here's what you should do NOW:

  • Pay the FULL ₹8,476 immediately to stop interest from compounding
  • Call Axis customer care and request one-time waiver of late fee (they often do this for first-time mistakes)
  • Set up autopay for FULL amount (not minimum) immediately
  • Never, ever pay just minimum again

Act fast - every day you delay, more interest is being charged.

2

I made the exact same mistake with my first card. Paid minimum thinking I was being smart. Next month's bill had interest on interest. Took me 4 months to pay off a ₹10k purchase that ended up costing me ₹14k total. Expensive lesson.

1

Call Axis customer care RIGHT NOW. Explain it's your first card, first bill, you didn't understand the terms. Request waiver of late fee and interest charges. If first agent says no, hang up and call again. Sometimes you get a sympathetic agent who'll waive it as one-time courtesy.

3

I'm sorry this happened to you but honestly, this is a good lesson to learn early with a small amount rather than later with ₹50k or ₹1L outstanding. You'll never make this mistake again.

1

Simple rule to never forget:

Credit card bill due = PAY IN FULL by due date.

Anything else = you're taking a loan at 36-42% interest rate.

Would you take a personal loan at 40% interest? No? Then don't pay minimum on credit cards.

0

If you can't pay full amount in any month, DON'T USE THE CARD. Seriously. Put it in a drawer. Use debit card. Only use credit card when you know you can pay in full. This is the golden rule.

4

The due date is STRICT. Not a suggestion, not a guideline. Even one day late = late fee + loss of interest-free period. Set reminders 3 days before due date. I have 3 alarms set - one week before, 3 days before, and on the due date itself.

0

Going forward, set up autopay for full amount. Most banking apps let you do this. Then you never have to worry about due dates or paying minimum. Full amount auto-deducted from your bank account every month.

2

For the SMS charges - yeah you can disable it, but keep at least one form of alert active (app notifications or email). You need to track your spending. The ₹25 is annoying but the alerts are actually useful.

1

Some good news: If this is your first late payment ever, your CIBIL score won't be affected much (if at all). But if you make it a habit, you'll see your score drop fast. And CRED/other apps will start showing you only high-interest loan offers instead of premium cards.

2

Download CRED or Paytm app and link your card there. They send push notifications as soon as bill is generated and again 3 days before due date. Much better than SMS alerts.

4

The interest calculation will blow your mind. Let's say you spent ₹10,000 on 1st of the month. Statement generated on 30th, due date is 15th of next month. You pay ₹9,000 (not full).

    Interest is charged:
  • On ₹10,000 from 1st to payment date (~45 days)
  • On remaining ₹1,000 from payment date to next statement
  • PLUS on any new purchases from the date of purchase

It compounds like crazy.

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