Past due means a required payment or balance remains unpaid after its due date.
Past due means a required payment or balance remains unpaid after its due date. In plain language, the borrower still owes money that should already have been paid by now.
Past-due status matters because it shows the account is no longer current. Once an amount is past due, the borrower is not just thinking about the next regular payment. The borrower is now trying to catch up on an overdue obligation while preventing the problem from getting worse.
It also matters because the phrase appears constantly in real account servicing. Borrowers may see a statement that says an amount is past due, get a notice warning that the account is becoming more serious, or hear a lender explain that the account must be brought current to avoid deeper Delinquency or Default.
Borrowers encounter past-due language on card statements, loan-servicing portals, collection letters, and repayment notices after a Late Payment. It often appears when a borrower still owes an earlier required amount in addition to the next scheduled payment.
The term is especially important in relief or workout conversations. A borrower asking about a Hardship Program or Payment Arrangement is often trying to address a balance that is already past due rather than just planning ahead for future payments.
A borrower misses a $75 minimum payment on a card. When the next statement arrives, it shows that amount as past due along with the next payment now coming up. The borrower is dealing with both the overdue amount and the risk of falling even farther behind.
Past due is not exactly the same as late payment. A Late Payment focuses on the missed timing event. Past due focuses on the unpaid amount or current account status after the due date has passed.
It is also not the same as Charge-Off. An account can be past due long before it reaches the much more serious accounting and recovery stage associated with charge-off.