Best 0% Credit Cards UK
A 0% credit card lets you borrow money at zero interest for a set period — either for purchases or for transferring existing debt. Used correctly, they're one of the most powerful money-saving tools available.
Types of 0% Credit Card
0% Purchase Cards
Lets you make new purchases and pay no interest for the 0% period. Ideal for a large planned purchase (sofa, boiler, car repair) that you want to spread over several months without paying interest.
- Make the purchase on the card
- Divide the total by the number of months in the 0% period
- Set up a direct debit for that amount every month
- Clear it completely before the 0% ends
0% Balance Transfer Cards
Move existing credit card debt to a new card and pay no interest on it for the 0% period. A small transfer fee typically applies (1–3% of the amount transferred).
Example: £3,000 on a card at 22% APR. Move to a 0% card with a 2% fee. Transfer fee: £60. Interest saved over 24 months: approximately £720. Net saving: £660.
Money Transfer Cards
The cash is sent directly to your bank account rather than to another card. Useful if you need cash to pay off an overdraft. Higher fees typically apply.
Current Best 0% Deals
Cards to check:
- Barclaycard Platinum — often one of the longest 0% purchase periods (up to 21 months)
- MBNA — competitive balance transfer offers
- Sainsbury's Bank — often competitive for balance transfers with low fees
- Virgin Money — regular strong balance transfer offers
Eligibility & Soft Checks
Sites including MoneySavingExpert, ClearScore, and Credit Karma offer eligibility checkers using a soft credit search that doesn't affect your score. Always use these before applying formally — declined applications leave a mark on your credit file.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Missing a payment — even one missed payment can void the 0% deal immediately. Set up a direct debit for at least the minimum payment
- Cash withdrawals — taking cash from a credit card charges interest from day one at a higher rate, regardless of your 0% deal
- Not clearing before the deal ends — diarise the end date and set a reminder 2 months before
Section 75 Protection
Under Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act, the credit card company is jointly liable with the retailer for purchases between £100 and £30,000. If a company goes bust or fails to deliver, you can claim your money back from the card provider. This doesn't apply to debit cards.