Debt Payoff Calculator

Find Your Fastest Path
to Being Debt-Free

Add your debts and compare the avalanche vs. snowball payoff strategies — see exactly how much interest you'll save and when you'll be free.

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Your Debts

Avalanche vs. Snowball:
Avalanche = pay highest interest first → saves the most money.
Snowball = pay smallest balance first → builds fastest momentum.
The best method is the one you'll stick to.

Strategy Comparison

Avalanche
Highest rate first
Debt-Free In
Total Interest
Best for saving money
Snowball
Smallest balance first
Debt-Free In
Total Interest
Best for motivation
Total Debt
Interest Saved (Aval.)
Total Payment / mo
Debt-Free Date

Avalanche Payoff Order

Debt Balance Rate Paid Off
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Debt Avalanche vs. Debt Snowball: A Complete Guide

There are two proven strategies for paying off multiple debts. Both work — the right choice depends on whether you're motivated more by saving money or by momentum.

The Debt Avalanche Method

Pay the minimum on all debts, then direct every extra dollar toward the highest-interest debt first. Once it's gone, roll that payment to the next highest-rate debt. This is mathematically optimal — you minimize total interest paid and get out of debt fastest in dollar terms. The downside: if your highest-rate debt also has a large balance, it can take a long time to see your first win.

The Debt Snowball Method

Pay minimums on all debts, then attack the smallest balance first regardless of interest rate. When it's paid off, the rush of eliminating a debt entirely provides motivation to continue. Research by Northwestern University found that people using the snowball method are more likely to stick with their payoff plan. The cost: you typically pay more in total interest than the avalanche method.

Which Method Is Right for You?

If the interest rate difference between your debts is large (say, a 24% credit card and a 5% student loan), the avalanche saves substantially more. If the rates are similar, the psychological wins from the snowball can matter more than the small mathematical difference. Many people hybrid the two: eliminate one small debt quickly for motivation, then switch to avalanche.

The Power of Extra Payments

Even small extra payments have a dramatic effect. On a $10,000 credit card at 22% APR with a $250 minimum payment, paying $350/month instead cuts payoff time from 6.7 years to 4.1 years and saves $2,800 in interest. The earlier in the debt's life you make extra payments, the more you save — because interest is charged on the remaining balance each month.

Debt Consolidation: When Does It Make Sense?

Consolidating high-rate credit cards into a personal loan at a lower rate can make the payoff math dramatically better. If you're paying 22% on credit cards and qualify for a 10% personal loan, consolidation can cut your interest bill nearly in half. However, it only works if you don't continue using the credit cards. Balance transfer cards with 0% promotional APR (typically 12–21 months) can eliminate all interest during the promo period — ideal if you can pay off the balance before the rate resets.