Suze Orman Has One Word for Anyone Still Paying Minimum Payments on Credit Card Debt in Retirement

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By Austin Smith Updated Published
Suze Orman Has One Word for Anyone Still Paying Minimum Payments on Credit Card Debt in Retirement

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“Financial suicide.”
That is what Suze Orman calls making minimum payments on credit card debt in retirement — and the simple math behind that bluntness is harder to argue with than the phrase itself.
Credit card APRs are sitting above 20% while the Federal Reserve has cut its benchmark rate to 3.75% — and the spread between what banks pay and what they charge has never been wider.
On a fixed income, that math erodes what you have while it compounds what you owe.

Preservation, not payment.

The arithmetic behind Orman’s verdict, the single exception that softens it, and the one question every retiree carrying a balance should ask before next month’s statement — laid out:

Why This Hits Retirees Harder Than Anyone Else

A working 45-year-old carrying credit card debt has options: a raise, a side job, a bonus. A retiree on a fixed income has a much narrower set of levers to pull. Social Security transfer payments totaled $1,578.2 billion in Q4 2025, and for millions of retirees that monthly check is the primary income source. It does not grow fast enough to outpace 22% interest.

The Consumer Price Index has risen from 319.785 in March 2025 to 326.588 in January 2026, meaning the purchasing power of that fixed income is quietly shrinking every month. Carrying high-interest debt on top of that creates a two-front problem: inflation erodes what you have while interest charges compound what you owe.

Where Orman’s Warning Is Exactly Right

For a 67-year-old drawing $2,200 per month from Social Security with a $8,000 credit card balance at 21% interest, minimum payments might run $160 to $200 per month. At that pace, the balance could take a decade or more to clear, and the total interest paid could exceed the original balance. Orman’s core point holds: minimum payments in retirement are not a debt management strategy. They are a debt preservation strategy.

Where to Apply Some Nuance

The advice is most urgent for retirees with no other liquid assets and no plan to pay down principal aggressively. Someone with a pension, a paid-off home, and a small credit card balance they clear within a year is in a different situation. The danger Orman is describing is the retiree who treats minimum payments as normal and indefinite.

Before accepting that pattern, ask one question: at this payment level, does this balance ever actually go away? If the honest answer is no, the strategy needs to change.

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About the Author Austin Smith, PhD, MD, CFA →

Austin Smith is a financial publisher with over two decades of experience as an investor, analyst, and advisor. He covers stocks, ETFs, Artificial intelligence and personal finance for 24/7 Wall St. Previously, he spent over a decade at The Motley Fool as a senior editor for Fool.com, portfolio advisor for Millionacres, and launched The Ascent to help reader take control of their personal finances.

His work has been featured on Fool.com, NPR, CNBC, USA Today, Yahoo Finance, MSN, AOL, Marketwatch, and many other publications. He is as an advisor to private companies, and co-hosts The AI Investor Podcast with Eric Bleeker. 

When not looking for investment opportunities, he can be found skiing, running, or playing soccer with his children. Learn more about Austin's investment approach here.

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