Founder Diary6 min read
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Founder Diary: Credit Card Interest Caps and the Real Business Model Behind Them

There's renewed momentum around capping credit card interest rates. Beyond politics, this is a moment worth paying attention to — and understanding how credit cards actually make money.

Olga Burninova

Olga Burninova

Founder & CEO, YPA Finance

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There's renewed momentum around capping credit card interest rates. The Credit Card Interest Rate Reduction Act is currently before Congress, and beyond politics, this is a moment worth paying attention to.

A Brief History of Interest Rates

For most of history, interest rates were capped far lower than they are today. That changed in 1978, when banks were allowed to charge the highest state rate nationwide.

Fast-forward to now: average APRs hover around 21% on approximately $1.2 trillion in credit card debt, with some consumer credit cards reaching 30–36% APR.

How Credit Cards Actually Make Money

What's often missed in this debate is how credit cards actually generate revenue. There are two primary streams:

Interest Revenue

About $120 billion per year comes from cardholder debt — the interest you pay when you carry a balance.

Interchange Fees

About $162 billion per year comes from interchange fees — paid by merchants every time you swipe your card. This is what largely funds rewards programs.

So when we talk about interest caps, this isn't a fragile, single-revenue business under threat. Credit card companies have multiple substantial revenue streams.

The Common Argument Against Caps

Opponents argue that caps would hurt people with lower credit scores by reducing their access to credit.

But there's evidence that challenges this narrative:

Credit unions have operated under an 18% cap for decades. They've remained profitable and continued lending to a wide range of consumers.

Marketing spend tells a story. Research shows that large banks spend more on marketing and advertising than many global consumer brands. That's meaningful — it suggests there's significant overhead that could be reduced before cutting access to credit.

What the Research Shows

Studies on potential interest rate caps indicate:

  • An 18% cap — could save consumers billions with little impact on credit availability
  • A 15% cap — still leaves most credit tiers profitable for lenders
  • A 10% cap — could save consumers nearly $100 billion per year, largely by reducing marketing spend rather than eliminating lending
  • The Founder Lesson

    The lesson here isn't about taking political sides.

    It's this: business models that depend on complexity, opacity, and consumer confusion eventually get challenged.

    In fintech — and really in any product — trust compounds. Confusion doesn't.

    When your business model requires customers to not understand what they're paying, you're building on unstable ground.

    What We Do Differently at YPA Finance

    At YPA Finance, we focus on:

  • Making interest visible before it compounds — so you see what you'll actually pay
  • Explaining tradeoffs clearly — no hidden terms or confusing language
  • Helping users avoid silent traps — instead of monetizing them
  • We don't make money when users make mistakes. We succeed when users understand their finances.

    The Bottom Line

    Systems built on clarity survive scrutiny.

    Systems built on friction eventually face reform.

    The credit card industry is facing questions it hasn't had to answer in decades. Whether or not caps pass, the conversation itself is a signal: consumers are paying attention.

    Founder lesson: Build products that get better under scrutiny, not worse.

    Further Reading

  • [Credit Card Interest Rate Reduction Act (S.381)](https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/senate-bill/381) — The current bill before Congress proposing interest rate caps
  • YPA Finance helps you understand your credit cards and avoid interest traps. Download free on iOS and Android.