How to read your credit card statement

Whether you’re asking yourself “what is this charge on my credit card?” or analyzing your spending and rewards earning, credit card statements feature a wealth of information beyond the track record of your expenses.

Making it a habit to review your statement can help you stay on track with your financial goals. Let’s take a look at what a typical card statement includes.

What is a credit card statement?

Your credit card statement is a monthly document that itemizes your spending over the past billing cycle and displays applied charges as well as other information about your credit account. Once a month, your card issuer sends it by mail or through paperless methods via your credit card company’s online portal.

Reviewing your credit card statements each month could bring more awareness to your debt balances, alert you to any errors or fraudulent activity, inform you of account changes and help you notice spending trends. Federal law requires issuers to send your statement at least 21 days before your payment due date, but you should be able to find new and historical statements through your bank’s website or app regardless of whether you choose the paper or paperless option.

Still, to truly benefit from reviewing your credit card statement, you have to know how to read it. Let’s break down a real-life credit card statement so you can better understand your own.

Your credit card statement: An example

Account summary

Screenshot provided by Seychelle Thomas sourced from Capital One
Screenshot provided by Seychelle Thomas sourced from Capital One

Your account summary is one of the main sections on your credit card bill and provides a brief outline of where your account stands. Think of it like a recap of what’s happened over the past billing cycle. You’ll see important information including —

  • Previous statement balance

  • Total payments received

  • Any statement credits

  • Applied fees

  • Interest charges

  • Total purchases

  • Available credit

  • Cash advances

Anything that affected your overall statement balance gets totaled up here. Simply put, your statement balance is the sum of all the charges, credits and payments made to your credit card account during that specific billing cycle. You’ll see any statement credits — like reward redemptions or refunds — and payments deducted from your balance while purchases, interest charges, fees and cash advances get added to it.

This section will also show your credit limit and the available credit on your account so you know how close you are to your credit limit, which allows you to figure your credit utilization.

Keep in mind

Your account summary includes only those transactions that came in before the close of your billing cycle — not those charged after. That means you could be seeing charges from weeks ago. You statement shows your statement balance, not your current balance. Online banking however, makes it more convenient to view your recent activity whenever you want.