How to Pay Off Debt Fast: Snowball vs Avalanche Method
Learn the two proven strategies to pay off debt fast. Compare the debt snowball and debt avalanche methods with real examples and find which approach works best for you.
Two Proven Strategies
There are two main strategies for paying off multiple debts: the Debt Avalanche (pay highest interest rate first) and the Debt Snowball (pay smallest balance first). Both involve making minimum payments on all debts and putting extra money toward one target debt. The key difference is which debt you target first.
The Debt Avalanche Method
With the avalanche method, you target the debt with the highest interest rate first while making minimum payments on everything else. Once that debt is paid off, you roll that payment into the next-highest rate debt. This is mathematically optimal — it minimizes the total interest you pay. Best for people motivated by numbers and saving money.
The Debt Snowball Method
The snowball method targets the smallest balance first regardless of interest rate. Pay it off quickly, then roll that payment into the next smallest debt. The psychological boost of eliminating debts quickly keeps you motivated. Research shows people using the snowball method are more likely to actually become debt-free, even though they pay slightly more interest.
Real Example: $25,000 in Debt
Imagine you have: Credit Card A ($5,000 at 22%), Credit Card B ($2,000 at 18%), Car Loan ($12,000 at 6%), Personal Loan ($6,000 at 10%), with $800/month for debt payments. Avalanche order: A→B→Personal→Car, saving roughly $1,200 in interest. Snowball order: B→A→Personal→Car, paying about $1,200 more but eliminating the first debt in just 3 months.
Extra Strategies to Pay Off Debt Faster
Beyond choosing a method: negotiate lower interest rates (call your credit card company), consolidate high-interest debt with a balance transfer or personal loan, use windfalls (tax refunds, bonuses) for lump-sum payments, cut one major expense temporarily, or increase income with a side hustle. Even an extra $100/month can cut years off your payoff timeline.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Which is better: snowball or avalanche?
Mathematically, avalanche saves more money. Psychologically, snowball keeps more people motivated. The best method is the one you'll stick with. If you're disciplined with numbers, use avalanche. If you need quick wins to stay motivated, use snowball.
Should I save or pay off debt first?
Build a small emergency fund ($1,000-2,000) first, then aggressively pay off high-interest debt (above 7-8%). Once high-interest debt is gone, build a full 3-6 month emergency fund while making minimum payments on low-interest debt.
Does paying off debt hurt your credit score?
Temporarily, closing a credit card can lower your score slightly by reducing available credit. But over time, less debt improves your credit utilization ratio and your score. Paying off debt is almost always the right financial move.