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Charge-Off Rate

Portfolio-loss metric comparing charge-offs, usually net charge-offs, with the loan base used for the measurement period.

The charge-off rate is a credit-quality metric that compares charge-offs, usually net charge-offs, with the size of the loan portfolio used as the measurement base. It helps lenders, investors, and regulators judge how much of a portfolio is being lost through loans deemed uncollectible.

Why It Matters

A simple charge-off number can look large or small without context. The rate matters because it scales losses to the portfolio size, which makes trends easier to compare across time, business lines, or institutions.

How It Works in Finance Practice

The exact calculation can vary by reporting framework, but the basic logic is consistent:

$$ \text{Charge-Off Rate} = \frac{\text{Net Charge-Offs}}{\text{Total or Average Loans}} $$

In practice, the numerator often uses net charge-offs rather than gross charge-offs, so recoveries are already reflected in the rate.

| Input | What it represents |

| — | — |

| Charge-Off | Recognition that a debt is unlikely to be collected in full |

| Net Charge-Offs | Charge-offs reduced by recoveries |

| Loan base | Total or average loans used for the measurement period |

Practical Example

If a bank reports $5 million of net charge-offs against a $500 million loan base, the charge-off rate is 1%. That means losses recognized through charge-offs equaled about 1% of the loans measured for the period.

It is not the same as delinquency rate

Delinquency Rate tracks overdue accounts that may still be cured. Charge-off rate reflects loans that have moved into recognized loss territory.

It is not the same as default rate

Default Rate focuses on contractual failure, while charge-off rate focuses on accounting loss recognition.

  • Charge-Off: Underlying loss-recognition event feeding the metric.

  • Net Charge-Off: Common numerator used in the rate calculation.

  • Delinquency: Earlier-stage payment stress that can precede charge-offs.

  • Loan Loss Provision: Reserve-building expense often analyzed alongside realized charge-off performance.

FAQs

Why do analysts use charge-off rate instead of just dollar losses?

Because the rate puts losses in relation to portfolio size, making comparisons more meaningful across time or across lenders.

Does a higher charge-off rate mean weaker credit quality?

Usually yes. A higher rate generally signals more severe realized credit losses relative to the portfolio.

Is the charge-off rate based on gross or net charge-offs?

Often it is based on net charge-offs, but the exact reporting convention should be checked in context.
Revised on Monday, May 18, 2026