Money Rehab with Nicole Lapin

Trump Wants to Cap Credit Card Interest at 10%. Here's What That Actually Means for You.

11 min
Mar 2, 2026about 2 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Nicole Lapin analyzes Trump's proposal to cap credit card interest rates at 10% APR, explaining why this seemingly consumer-friendly policy could actually reduce credit access for lower-credit borrowers. She provides practical strategies for paying down high-interest debt without waiting for political solutions.

Insights
  • Interest rate caps can backfire by pushing lenders to deny credit to riskier borrowers rather than price for risk
  • When mainstream credit becomes unavailable, consumers turn to worse alternatives like payday loans with triple-digit rates
  • The debt avalanche method (targeting highest APR debt first) is more cost-effective than the snowball method
  • Credit utilization improvement through strategic credit line increases can unlock better borrowing options
  • Direct negotiation with credit card issuers for lower rates works more often than expected
Trends
Credit card debt reaching $1.2 trillion nationally with average 21% APR ratesPolitical proposals for consumer credit regulation gaining traction amid financial pressureRising consumer costs across housing, food, and transportation driving debt dependencyBanks facing potential profit center disruption from interest rate regulationShift toward debt consolidation and balance transfer strategies as rates climb
Companies
Federal Reserve
Cited as source for 21% average credit card APR statistics in the US market
Lending Club
Recommended platform for comparing debt consolidation loan offers
SoFi
Mentioned as option for debt consolidation loan comparison shopping
Credit Karma
Listed as resource for comparing debt consolidation loan offers
People
Donald Trump
Proposed capping credit card interest rates at 10% APR as policy initiative
Nicole Lapin
Host analyzing the credit card rate cap proposal and providing debt strategies
Quotes
"Credit card interest is simply out of control. Americans owe a total of $1.2 trillion in credit card debt."
Nicole Lapin
"When lenders can't price for risk, they stop lending to risk. Period."
Nicole Lapin
"When people get shut out of mainstream credit, they don't stop needing money. They just get pushed into worse options."
Nicole Lapin
"You can't control what happens in Washington. You can only control yourself."
Nicole Lapin
Full Transcript
2 Speakers
Speaker A

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Speaker B

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Speaker A

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Speaker B

I'm Nicole Lapvin, the only financial expert. You don't need a dictionary to understand. It's time for some money. Let's break down a financial headline that's causing a lot of confusion right now. President Trump wants to cap credit card interest rates at 10% APR. And if you're somebody carrying credit card debt right now, and let's be real, millions of Americans are probably locked into this topic because that number sounds a lot better than the rates many of us are seeing right now. Listen, it all sounds fine and dandy until you think think about how lending really works. So today I'm breaking it down. First things first. This is a proposal. It is not a rule. It is not a law. It is not a done deal. There is no executive order. There's no legislation, no regulation actually in effect. So if you log onto your credit card account today, literally nothing has changed. Credit card interest is simply out of control. Americans owe a total of $1.2 trillion in credit card debt. The average APR in the US is just over 21%, according to the the Federal Reserve. But some cards are charging 28, 29, even 30% or more. That means you could be paying hundreds of dollars a month and barely even touching the actual balance. And with prices rising across the board, food, housing, transportation, insurance. This kind of high interest debt starts to feel like a trap that you cannot escape. So if you have a big credit card bill, you are probably loving this. Banks are not. And here's the plot twist. Credit card holders shouldn't be loving this either. From the bank's pov credit cards are a huge profit center. So that is a big part of their opposition to this. But here's the real reason that capping interest rates is a potential problem for all of us. It might limit access to credit. Now this sounds unrelated, but here's the link. Your credit card a PR is based on risk. Higher credit score, lower apr. Lower credit score, higher APR is basically a seesaw. That is not a moral judgment. That is just how unsecured lending works. With secured lending, creditors can take your collateral if you don't pay. Like your home in the case of a mortgage or your car in the case of a car loan. So if you cap the rate at 10%, lenders lose the ability to price for risk. And when lenders can't price for risk, they stop lending to risk. Period. Meaning the real question isn't when will my APR drop? The real question is who the heck is still going to get approved? Because if you've got a pristine credit report, you probably are still going to get credit. If you don't though, you might not get a cheaper rate on the card. You might not get the card at all. And when people get shut out of mainstream credit, they don't stop needing money. They just get pushed into worse options. Payday loans, title loans, cash advances, the stuff with triple digit interest rates that make credit card A PRs look lovely. We have to be honest about this trade off. A cap might reduce interest for some borrowers, but it can also reduce access for many others. So no, this is not a credit card companies are evil problem solved thing. This is a if you change the price of credit, you change the whole equation, namely who gets it. So instead of a white horse that's just a trojan horse, here's what you can do to help yourself. If you are carrying high interest rate debt, don't wait around for a political promise to maybe turn into action. Because while you're waiting, that interest is compounding every single single day. I have personally been there. I've had credit card debt with sky high interest rates. And when I finally got out of it, it changed my life and my mission. It is why I do this show because compound interest is no joke. It can work against you in the case of debt and it can work in your favor in the case of investing. I would much rather see you on the wealth building side of the compound interest equation. So if you're in high interest debt today, let's make a plan first. Start with your apr. Know exactly what you're paying. You can't fix what you can't see. So step one is simple, but it's really powerful. Pull up your most recent credit card statements and check the APR annual percentage rate on each card. You'll often find it in the fine print on page two or three of your statement. The average credit card APR right now is over 21%, but yours could be higher or lower. Remember, depending on your credit score, what matters most is the order which card is charging you the most interest interest every month. That is the one that we're going to target first. This is also where you figure out how much of your monthly payment is going toward interest versus actually reducing your balance. And for many people that number is so, so frustrating. But it's also so motivating. If you have multiple cards, automate extra payments to the card with the highest APR first. Once you know which card is charging the most interest, make a plan to hit that one the hardest then. This is called the debt avalanche method compared to the snowball method and it is the most cost effective strategy for paying off debt. It's the one that I used next. Look into balance transfer cards or personal loans to consolidate at a lower rate. If your credit is in decent shape, you might be able to refinance a debt to a lower interest rate which could save you thousands of dollars and help you pay it off faster. There are two common ways to do this. Balance transfer credit cards and debt consolidation loans. Balance transfer credit cards offer 0% interest for a promotional period, usually 12 to 21 months. If you're approved, you move your existing high interest balance to the new card and pay it off interest free. During that window. Just be sure to check for transfer fees, typically 3 to 5%, and make a plan to pay it off before the promo period ends or your rate could skyrocket. Debt consolidation loans are fixed rate personal loans used to pay off credit cards. The benefit is that you're trading variable high interest rate debt for a single monthly payment at a lower predictable rate, usually between 6 to 12% depending on your credit profile. Check out sites like Lending Club, so Fi and Credit Karma to compare offers. But of course, read the fine print and watch out for origination fees. Pro Tip don't consolidate debt if you're just going to keep spending on your cards and rack up new balances. This really only works if you are completely ready to stop the bleeding and shift into payoff debt mode. Or forget the balance transfer and call your card issuer and negotiate your interest rate. Yes, you can actually do this. I have done it before. I've recorded it before and it works more often than you'd think. You just have to ask. Here's what you do. Call up the number on the back of your card, explain that you've been a long time customer, that you've been making your payments on time, hopefully, and you'd like to request a lower apr, especially given your history with the company. If you've received better offers from other card issuers, mention that too. And if they say no, ask if there's anything you can do to qualify for a lower rate, like a balance review or a credit check. This can take about 10 minutes and potentially save you hundreds if not thousands of dollars over time. It is low effort, high reward. My favorite. Even an extra 25, 50, 100 bucks a month on top of the minimum payment can shave months off your payoff timeline and save you serious money on interest. Look, whether this credit card cap happens or not, it's a symptom of a bigger issue. Consumers are under ser financial pressure. A 10% cap would be a huge shift from where we are now, but the outcome depends entirely on the details, how it's implemented, who it applies to, and how the banks respond. But no matter what happens in Washington, here's what matters most. Know your numbers. You can't control what happens in Washington. You can only control yourself. So know your apr, know how much that interest is costing you, and most importantly, know your plan to get out of debt. Because no one should be stuck paying 20, 25, 30% for the rest of their life. For today's tip, you can take straight to the bank, opt into credit line increases strategically, and then don't spend a dollar of it. Here's why. Credit utilization. That's the percentage of your limit that you're actually using, and it is one of the most important factors in your credit score. And high utilization is often what keeps people trapped in these high APR credit cards. When your limit goes up but your balance stays the same, your utilization drops, sometimes really dramatically, which can boost your score and open the door to lower rate balance transfer options, cheaper consolidation loans, or better negotiation leverage with your current issuer. The key is treating that increased limit as invisible money. You don't touch it, you just use it to unlock cheaper borrowing and escape the interest trap faster. This is how you use credit to fight credit, not to fuel it.

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