Chapter 8: Getting Out of Debt
Getting out of debt is one of the most important financial goals you can pursue. Yet with multiple debts at different interest rates, it's unclear which to pay down first. Should you attack the smallest balance (snowball method) for quick psychological wins, or the highest interest rate (avalanche method) to save the most money?
This calculator lets you simulate both strategies and see exactly how much each saves on interest and how many months faster you'll be debt-free. Add your actual debts, set your extra monthly payment amount, and compare the results. The answer depends on your situation and your personality.
| Debt | Balance | APR | Min |
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Your results show two bars comparing months to payoff and total interest paid under each strategy. Debt avalanche (highest rate first) appears on the left, and debt snowball (smallest balance first) appears on the right. The comparison box below shows you the specific interest savings from using avalanche and whether avalanche is substantially faster. If the difference is small (under $200 saved or under 3 months faster), consider snowball for its psychological benefits.
The timeline difference is often more meaningful than the interest difference. Paying off debts faster creates momentum and motivation. Seeing balances hit zero provides a powerful psychological win, especially if you're struggling to stay committed. This is why snowball works well for people who need visible progress, even if avalanche would save slightly more money.
The ideal strategy depends on several factors beyond pure interest savings. Avalanche is mathematically optimal and saves the most money, making it ideal if you have strong discipline and can stay motivated by tracking total interest saved. Snowball is psychologically optimal and eliminates debts faster (individually), providing motivation through visible progress. Many people succeed with a hybrid approach: snowball until they pay off their first or second debt for motivation, then switch to avalanche. Choose based on what will keep you committed for the months or years needed to get debt-free.
Your extra payment amount matters more than which method you choose. Adding just $50 to your minimum payments can cut your payoff timeline in half and save thousands in interest. The calculator shows how different extra payment amounts impact your timeline. If you're struggling to find extra money, revisit your budget. Even temporary sacrifices (reducing wants, side income) to accelerate debt payoff are worth it because interest costs you money every month.
Minimum payments are designed to keep you in debt as long as possible. Most of your payment covers interest, not principal. This means your balance drops slowly and you pay massive amounts in total interest. Even if your budget is tight, committing to extra payments dramatically changes your outcome. If you truly cannot pay more than minimums, your debt problem is actually a budget problem that needs addressing before you can be debt-free.
Seeing that payoff will take years is discouraging, but every month of payments moves you closer to freedom. Rather than focusing on the total timeline, celebrate monthly progress. Every paid-off debt is a win. Every month of extra payments saves interest. Getting discouraged and giving up guarantees you'll stay in debt. Staying committed for years, even when progress feels slow, guarantees freedom. This is a mindset battle more than a financial one.
The fastest path to debt freedom requires stopping the bleeding. You cannot pay off debt while accumulating new debt simultaneously. It's mathematically impossible to make real progress if you're adding to your balances. Before aggressively paying down debt, ensure your budget prevents new debt. Cut spending, build a small emergency fund to handle surprises, and commit to no new debt. Only then can your extra payments actually reduce your balances.
Your payoff plan should change if your income increases or decreases, or if unexpected expenses arise. If you get a bonus or raise, increase your extra payment rather than increasing spending. If you lose income, adjust your strategy but stay committed. If an emergency drains your savings, rebuild your emergency fund while maintaining your debt payments. Your strategy should evolve as life happens, but your commitment to debt freedom should remain constant.
These free tools give you the snapshot. Our software, templates, and books give you the full system to build lasting financial health.