Interest rates on some retail credit cards climb to record 33%. Can they even do that?

Some store credit cards now charge more than 33% interest, after blowing past a symbolic 30% threshold that retailers and banks dared not cross.

Can they even do that?

The short answer: yes.

“Yep. They can charge that much,” said Chi Chi Wu, a senior attorney at the nonprofit National Consumer Law Center. “Credit cards can actually charge whatever they want. It’s a little-known fact.”

Interest rates on credit cards have reached historic highs, largely in response to an aggressive campaign of rate hikes by the Federal Reserve in 2022 and 2023.

The average retail credit card now charges 28.93% interest, a record high, according to Bankrate, the personal finance site.

In a recent survey of lenders, Bankrate found four retail cards that charge an eye-popping 33.24% annual interest. The retailers: Academy Sports + Outdoors, Burlington, Good Sam and Michaels.

“Rates are the highest we’ve seen now in our database,” said Ted Rossman, a senior industry analyst at Bankrate.

The survey found 16 other retail cards that charge 32.24% interest, a list that includes the brands Ross, Wayfair and Piercing Pagoda.

The average retail credit card now charges 28.93% interest, a record high, according to Bankrate, the personal-finance site.
The average retail credit card now charges 28.93% interest, a record high, according to Bankrate, the personal-finance site.

Credit cards are charging record interest as the holidays approach

Credit card analysts see those rates as a red flag as the nation heads into the season of giving. Inflation-weary shoppers may be tempted to put big purchases on a new store card, unaware of the interest they will face if they carry the balance into the new year.

“I think it’s a big cautionary tale, headed into the holidays,” Rossman said.

Card rates have risen dramatically in a short span. The average rate across all commercial bank cards surged from 14.56% in February 2022 to 21.19% in August 2023, according to federal data.

Credit cards tend to carry higher interest rates than car loans or home loans. A credit card is not generally “secured” by a piece of property that the lender can claim if the borrower stops repaying the debt. Card companies take a risk by extending credit to millions of Americans with a wide range of credit scores, some of whom will default on the debt.

Store cards tend to charge more interest than other cards, partly because retail cardholders tend to earn lower income and have weaker credit.

Retailers often pitch cards to customers at the checkout counter, as other customers line up behind them, not an optimal moment for the potential cardholder to review the fine print on annual percentage rates and foreign transaction fees.

“Credit card contracts are extremely complicated,” said Christopher Peterson, a law professor at the University of Utah. “Even talented lawyers would struggle to understand them when they’re at the end of the line at the mall.”