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Debt Snowball & Avalanche Calculator

Strategy your way to debt freedom. Compare methods, stress-test scenarios, and project post-debt wealth.

Debt Dashboard
Type Name Balance Int% Min Pay Free
Freedom Projections
DEBT-FREE DATE
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Total Debt =
Avg Rate =
Monthly Min =
Strategy = Snowball ❄️
Total Balance
Total Interest
Interest Saved
Time Saved
Active Debts
Monthly Total

❄️ vs 🏔️ Snowball vs Avalanche

💼 Debt Consolidation Analysis

Would consolidating all debts into a single personal loan save money vs your current strategy?

📊 Extra Payment Sensitivity

See how different extra monthly payments affect your payoff timeline and total interest. Your current extra payment is highlighted.

🎯 Goal Seeker

How much extra do you need per month to be completely debt-free by a target date?

Calculating…

💰 Lump Sum Impact

How does a one-time payment (bonus, tax refund) change your timeline?

🏆 Payoff Order

📅 Monthly Payment Timeline

Watch your monthly payment obligation shrink as each debt is eliminated.

💰 Post-Debt Wealth Projector

After becoming debt-free, redirect your freed-up monthly payments into investments and watch your wealth grow.

📄 Payment Schedule

HOW TO USE

01

List All Debts

Input your current balances, interest rates, and minimum monthly payments for every debt you want to pay off. Use preset templates to get started instantly.

02

Choose Strategy

Select Snowball for quick wins or Avalanche for maximum interest savings. Add extra monthly payment to see the visual impact on your freedom date.

03

Analyze & Project

Use Scenario Analysis to stress-test your plan. Then see the Payoff Projector to visualize the wealth you'll build after becoming debt-free.

FAQ

What is the difference between Snowball and Avalanche?

The Snowball method focuses on psychological momentum by paying off smaller balances first. The Avalanche method focuses on mathematical efficiency by targeting high-interest rates regardless of the balance size.

Which payoff method is mathematically superior?

Mathematically, the Avalanche method is superior because it minimizes the total interest paid over the life of your debt. By killing the most expensive debt first, you reduce the 'cost of carry' fastest, leading to an earlier payoff date in almost all scenarios.

How does a 'Lump Sum' payment help my plan?

A lump sum payment (like a tax refund or work bonus) acts as a powerful catalyst. Because interest is calculated based on your remaining principal, an immediate reduction of that principal permanently lowers every subsequent interest charge.

How do extra monthly payments impact the timeline?

Extra payments create the 'snowball effect'. As one debt is paid off, its minimum payment is not spent elsewhere — instead, it's added to your extra monthly payment, making the payoff of the next debt even faster.

Does this calculator account for compounding interest?

Yes. Our simulation engine performs a month-by-month calculation, projecting interest charges based on your declining principal balances. This provides a realistic and accurate timeline compared to simple linear calculations.

What is the 'Minimum Payment Trap'?

Credit issuers set minimum payments extremely low to maximize the interest you pay over time. If you only pay the minimum, a large portion covers interest while only a tiny amount touches the principal. Our strategies are designed specifically to break this trap.

What is 'Snowflaking' in debt repayment?

Snowflaking is the practice of taking small, irregular sums of money (selling items, side gigs, found change) and immediately applying them to your target debt. These small 'snowflakes' join your larger 'snowball' to shave weeks or months off your plan.

Should I pay off debt or save for emergencies first?

Most experts recommend a balanced approach: save a small '$1,000 to $2,000' starter emergency fund first. This ensures that if a car repair or medical bill arises, you won't have to use a credit card and derail the momentum of your debt payoff journey.

Formula & Methodology

Monthly Interest

Monthly Interest = Balance × (APR ÷ 12)

Each month, interest is calculated on the remaining principal balance, then added to the balance before payments are applied.

Snowball Order

Sort debts by Balance (lowest first)

Pay minimums on all debts, then direct all extra payment to the smallest balance. When it is paid off, roll that payment into the next smallest debt.

Avalanche Order

Sort debts by APR (highest first)

Pay minimums on all debts, then direct all extra payment to the highest-interest debt. Mathematically optimal — minimizes total interest paid.

Interest Savings

Savings = Total Interest (Min Only) − Total Interest (Strategy)

The difference between making only minimum payments and using a strategic payoff method. Extra payments dramatically reduce total interest by shortening the repayment timeline.

Key Terms

Debt Snowball
A payoff strategy that targets the smallest balance first for quick psychological wins, then rolls freed-up payments into the next debt.
Debt Avalanche
A payoff strategy that targets the highest interest rate first to minimize total interest paid over the life of all debts.
Snowflaking
Applying small, irregular extra payments (side income, rebates, found money) toward the target debt to accelerate payoff.
Freedom Date
The projected date when all debts will be fully paid off under the chosen strategy and payment amount.
Minimum Payment Trap
Credit card minimums are set low (often 1-2% of balance + interest), keeping you in debt for decades and costing more in interest than the original purchases.
Lump Sum Payment
A one-time extra payment (tax refund, bonus) applied directly to principal, which permanently reduces future interest charges on that debt.

Worked Examples

Example 1: Snowball Method

Debts: Store card $800 @22%, Car loan $5,000 @6%, Credit card $3,200 @19%. Extra payment: $200/mo.

Order: Store card first ($800), then credit card ($3,200), then car loan ($5,000). Store card paid off in ~4 months, freeing its $35 minimum to join the snowball.

Example 2: Avalanche Method

Same debts. Order: Store card first (22%), then credit card (19%), then car loan (6%). Same order in this case since smallest balance also has highest rate.

Savings: Avalanche saves $127 in total interest over Snowball for this particular debt mix.

Example 3: Lump Sum Impact

Scenario: $3,000 tax refund applied to $8,000 credit card at 21%.

Impact: Reduces balance to $5,000 immediately. Monthly interest drops from $140 to $87.50 — saving $52.50/month in interest. This accelerates payoff by approximately 8 months.

Snowball vs Avalanche Comparison

FactorSnowballAvalanche
Sort OrderLowest balance firstHighest interest first
Total Interest PaidSlightly moreMathematically minimized
Payoff SpeedSimilar (slightly slower)Slightly faster
Psychological BenefitQuick wins build motivationLess emotional reward early
Success Rate (studies)Higher completion rateLower completion rate
Best ForPeople who need momentumDisciplined optimizers

The Complete Guide to Debt Payoff Strategies

Why Strategy Matters

Making only minimum payments on credit card debt can take 20-30 years and cost more in interest than the original purchases. A strategic approach — whether Snowball or Avalanche — can cut payoff time by 50-70% and save thousands in interest. The key is directing every available dollar above minimums toward one target debt at a time, creating a cascading effect as each debt is eliminated.

The Psychology of Debt Payoff

Research shows that the Snowball method has higher completion rates despite being mathematically suboptimal. The quick wins from eliminating small debts first create dopamine responses that reinforce the behavior. The Avalanche method requires more patience as the first target (highest rate) may also have a large balance. Choose the method that matches your personality — a completed Snowball plan beats an abandoned Avalanche plan every time.

Maximizing Your Extra Payment

The single most impactful factor is the size of your extra monthly payment. Even $50 extra per month can cut years off a credit card payoff timeline. Common sources: reducing subscriptions, selling unused items, overtime pay, tax refunds, or temporarily cutting discretionary spending. Every dollar of extra payment goes directly to principal, permanently reducing future interest charges.

After Debt Freedom

Once all debts are paid, redirect your full monthly payment amount into savings and investments. If you were paying $800/month toward debt, that same $800 invested at 8% annual return grows to over $146,000 in 10 years. The discipline you built during debt payoff becomes the foundation for wealth building.