A balance transfer APR is the annual percentage rate applied to transferred debt on a credit-card account.
Balance transfer APR means the annual percentage rate applied to transferred debt on a credit-card account. In plain language, it is the pricing rule for balances moved from another account rather than created by new purchases.
Balance transfer APR matters because transferred debt is often the reason a borrower opened the new card in the first place. If the transfer pricing is favorable, the borrower may reduce cost and repay faster. If it is not, the move may offer less benefit than expected.
It also matters because borrowers sometimes pay attention only to the words “balance transfer” and miss the separate pricing structure attached to it. The rate on transferred debt may differ from both the purchase rate and the cash-advance rate.
Borrowers encounter balance-transfer APR in Balance Transfer offers, card disclosures, and promotional pricing tables. It is closely connected to Intro APR, Variable APR, and the general Annual Percentage Rate (APR) framework.
It is especially important when comparing card offers meant for debt payoff, because the transfer rate often determines whether the move creates real financial breathing room.
A borrower transfers $5,000 from an older high-rate card to a new card. The cost of carrying that transferred debt is determined by the balance transfer APR rather than by the normal purchase APR.
Balance transfer APR is not the same as Purchase APR. Purchase APR applies to ordinary card spending, while balance transfer APR applies to moved debt.
It is also different from Cash Advance APR. Both can differ from purchase pricing, but they apply to different account uses.