Credit Utilization Calculator
Your credit utilization ratio, the portion of your available revolving credit you’re currently using is a major factor in your credit score. This credit utilization calculator gives you a clear, instant picture of your overall usage by letting you add multiple credit lines, each with an outstanding balance and a credit limit. It immediately computes your total balance, total credit limit, remaining credit, and utilization percentage, then assigns a straightforward rating from Excellent to Very High. There’s no guesswork, no data collection, and no cost. Simply enter your numbers, and the tool updates automatically. Built by Toolraxy, it runs entirely in your browser, so your financial details stay private.
How to Use the Credit Utilization Calculator
Select your currency from the dropdown at the top.
Review the three default credit lines—they come pre-filled with sample values.
For each credit line, enter the money used (outstanding balance) in the first field.
Enter the credit limit for that line in the second field.
To add more accounts, click “Add credit line.” A new row appears instantly.
Remove any credit line by clicking the trash icon on its card (the first three lines cannot be removed in the default setup, but additional ones can).
Check your summary: total balance, total limit, remaining credit, utilization percentage, and rating update live as you type.
Use Copy or Share to save or send your results.
How the Tool Works
This calculator performs a simple aggregation and ratio computation across all credit lines you enter. No complex scoring algorithms, per-card utilizations, or projections are included—just the numbers that matter most for a quick health check.
Formulas:
Total Balance = Sum of all “money used” amounts
Total Credit Limit = Sum of all credit limits
Remaining Credit = Total Credit Limit – Total Balance
Credit Utilization (%) = (Total Balance ÷ Total Credit Limit) × 100
If the total credit limit is zero (e.g., all limits set to 0), the utilization is 0%. The utilization percentage is capped at 100% and never negative. The remaining credit can be negative only if balances exceed limits, but the display handles that naturally.
Rating Scale:
The tool classifies the utilization percentage into one of five labeled badges:
Excellent: ≤10%
Good: 11% – 30%
Fair: 31% – 50%
High: 51% – 80%
Very High: >80%
The rating is shown in a colored badge next to the utilization percentage in the summary section. There is no additional impact statement or recommendation generated by the tool, but the rating scale itself is designed to reflect widely accepted credit-health benchmarks.
Validation and Edge Cases:
Negative values in any balance or limit field are treated as zero during summation.
If all credit lines are removed (which can be done by deleting all optional lines and if the first three were made removable in a custom setup), totals become zero and utilization shows 0%.
All calculations run instantly on any input change; the Calculate button is also available for manual recalculations.
Worked Example: Three Credit Lines
Let’s use the default values the tool starts with to illustrate a realistic scenario. These numbers can be changed, but they provide a helpful reference.
Credit Line 1:
Credit Line 2:
Credit Line 3:
Step 1: Find total balance
500+500+300 + 700=700=1,500
Step 2: Find total credit limit
2,000+2,000+1,500 + 2,500=2,500=6,000
Step 3: Compute utilization
(1,500÷1,500÷6,000) × 100 = 25.0%
Step 4: Determine remaining credit
6,000–6,000–1,500 = $4,500
Step 5: See the rating
According to the tool’s scale, 25.0% falls in the Good (11‑30%) range, shown with a blue badge.
Takeaway: This user is using a quarter of their total available revolving credit, leaving plenty of room. Even a modest increase in spending say, pushing the total balance to $2,100 would move the ratio to 35% and shift the rating to Fair. Tracking this number with the calculator helps catch small changes before they turn into negative score signals.
Benefits of Using This Credit Utilization Calculator
Handles multiple credit lines effortlessly—add as many as you need
Shows remaining credit in dollars, not just a percentage
Assigns an easy-to-understand rating with a color-coded badge
Saves time compared to manual spreadsheet calculations
Eliminates arithmetic mistakes that can mislead financial decisions
Updates in real time as you type—no waiting for results
Completely free with no sign-up or personal information required
Private and client-side—your data never leaves your device
Accessible on any device with a responsive, mobile-friendly layout
Multi-currency support for users managing accounts in different currencies
Frequently Asked Questions
How accurate is this credit utilization calculator?
The calculator applies the exact mathematical formula (total balance ÷ total limit × 100) and rounds to one decimal place. If the balances and limits you enter match those on your credit report, the result will be accurate.
What does the “remaining credit” number tell me?
It shows how much credit you still have available across all your cards, calculated as total credit limit minus total balance. It’s a simple way to see your financial headroom in dollar terms.
Can I use this tool to see per-card utilization?
No, this calculator aggregates all credit lines to show your overall utilization only. For per-card utilization, you would need to calculate each line separately.
How is the rating decided?
The rating is assigned automatically based on the utilization percentage: ≤10% is Excellent, 11-30% is Good, 31-50% is Fair, 51-80% is High, and >80% is Very High. These thresholds reflect commonly cited credit-health guidelines.
Is my information safe when I use this calculator?
Yes, all calculations happen inside your browser. Toolraxy does not collect, store, or have access to any of the numbers you enter.
What’s the difference between this calculator and a credit score simulator?
This tool calculates your current credit utilization ratio and rates it, but it does not simulate how a change in utilization would alter your credit score. A simulator attempts to estimate point changes, which involves many other factors beyond just utilization.
Can I use this for non-credit-card revolving lines?
Yes, you can use the “money used” and “credit limit” fields for any revolving account, such as a home equity line of credit (HELOC) or a personal line of credit, as long as it has a defined limit.
What if I have a charge card with no preset limit?
Charge cards that don’t report a credit limit may not be factored into utilization the same way by credit scoring models. You can still enter your best estimate, but the resulting utilization may not perfectly align with how a scoring model would treat that account.
Why does the calculator start with three credit lines?
The tool is designed with three default credit lines to give you an immediate, realistic example. You can change their values, remove additional ones, or add more lines to match your actual accounts.
How often should I calculate my credit utilization?
A monthly check is a good rhythm, especially around the time your statements close, because that’s when many issuers report balances. Checking before a credit application is also recommended so you can take last-minute action if needed.