A cash advance fee is the charge applied when a credit-card transaction is treated as a cash advance.
Cash advance fee means the charge applied when a credit-card transaction is treated as a Cash Advance. It is separate from the interest cost that may also apply to the transaction.
Cash advance fee matters because it makes cash-like card use more expensive from the start. A borrower can face a fee immediately and then still pay interest under the card’s cash-advance pricing rules.
It also matters because many readers assume that repaying the amount quickly will wipe away the whole cost. Even when a borrower repays fast, the fee itself may still apply because it is part of the transaction pricing.
In Canada, cash-advance fees are usually disclosed in the cardholder agreement and cost-of-borrowing information. The issuer may describe the fee as a flat amount, a percentage of the advance, or a rule that depends on the transaction size.
The fee should be read separately from the interest treatment. A cash advance can have both a fee and its own borrowing-rate behaviour, and it often does not benefit from the same Grace Period that ordinary purchases may receive.
A borrower uses a credit card for an ATM withdrawal during a short cash crunch. The next account view shows the amount withdrawn, a separate cash-advance fee, and interest treatment that is less favourable than a normal purchase.
Cash advance fee is not the same as the Purchase Interest Rate. One is a transaction fee. The other is an interest rate applied to carried purchase balances.
It is also not the same as an Annual Fee. An annual fee is tied to holding the card account, while a cash-advance fee applies when the borrower makes a specific cash-like transaction.