Debt Payoff Planner

Build a payoff plan with Avalanche or Snowball, see your debt-free date, and download the schedule — all locally in your browser.

Name
Balance
APR %
Min Payment
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Total minimums: —

Add All Your Debts

Enter balances, APRs, and minimums for credit cards, loans, and more—everything in one place.

Snowball or Avalanche

Choose motivation (smallest balance first) or math-optimized savings (highest APR first).

Clear Payoff Timeline

Get your debt-free date and month-by-month schedule—see principal vs. interest each step.

Extra Payment Impact

Add monthly or one-time boosts and watch time and interest drop in real time.

Compare Scenarios

Test different budgets and strategies side-by-side to pick the fastest, cheapest route.

Private & Free

Runs locally in your browser. No sign-ups, no uploads, no tracking. Close the tab—data’s gone.

How to Build Your Debt Payoff Plan

Create a realistic roadmap to debt-free—fast, motivating, and math-smart.

  1. Click Add Debt for each balance. Enter name, balance, APR, and minimum payment.
  2. Select a strategy: Snowball (smallest balance first) or Avalanche (highest APR first).
  3. Enter your total monthly budget for debt. The tool pays minimums, then funnels the rest to your current target.
  4. Optional: add extra principal (monthly or one-time) to see time/interest saved.
  5. Press Calculate Plan to see your debt-free date, monthly schedule, and interest saved.
  6. Download or print your plan. Review monthly and adjust as your income or goals change.

Debt Payoff Planner: The Friendly, No-Shame Guide to Becoming Debt-Free

If debt were a person, it would be that guest who shows up uninvited, eats all your snacks, and sleeps on your couch “just for a few months.” Good news: you don’t have to be a financial wizard to ask debt to leave. You just need a plan, a little consistency, and a tool that turns big numbers into small monthly steps. This guide walks you through everything—what debt really is, how interest sneaks up, and the exact strategies that get you to zero.

Debt 101: What You Owe vs. What You Pay

Debt is money you borrowed. Your balance is what’s left to repay. Your APR is the yearly cost of borrowing, expressed as a percentage. When you make a payment, part goes to interest (the fee) and the rest to principal (the balance). The higher the APR and the longer the timeline, the more you pay in interest. That’s why speed and strategy matter.

Many debts have minimum payments that keep your account current but do little to shrink the principal—especially credit cards. Without a plan, you can pay for years and feel like nothing is changing. Enter the Debt Payoff Planner.

Two Proven Strategies: Snowball vs. Avalanche

Think of your extra payment money as a snowball rolling downhill. Where you roll it first determines how fast it grows:

  • Debt Snowball: Line up debts by smallest balance first. Pay minimums on all, then throw every extra dollar at the smallest balance until it’s gone. Move to the next smallest, now with a bigger “snowball.” Result: fast wins and motivation.
  • Debt Avalanche: Line up debts by highest APR first. Same method, different order. Result: maximum interest saved, often slightly fewer months overall.

Which is “best”? The one you’ll follow. If motivation is your struggle, the snowball delivers quick psychological wins. If you’re mathematically driven, the avalanche saves more money. Our planner can show both outcomes so you choose with eyes wide open.

Build Your Plan in 10 Minutes

Grab your statements (or log in to your accounts) and collect: balance, APR, minimum payment. Then:

  • Add each debt to the planner (name, balance, APR, minimum).
  • Choose snowball or avalanche.
  • Enter your total monthly budget for debt. The planner pays minimums first and funnels the rest toward your current target debt.
  • Optional: add extra principal (monthly or one-time). Try $25, $50, $100—watch your debt-free date jump forward.
  • Click Calculate Plan. Save/print your schedule and stick it somewhere visible.
Quick Example: You have three debts—$600 at 19%, $2,400 at 16%, $4,000 at 8%. You can pay $300/month total. With snowball, the $600 goes first (freedom hit), then $2,400, then $4,000. With avalanche, the 19% goes first, saving more interest overall. The planner shows both timelines and dollars saved so you can pick your style.

Why Extra Principal Is a Superpower

Interest is calculated on your remaining principal. Every extra dollar you throw at principal now is a dollar that doesn’t sit there collecting interest next month. It’s small-dollar time travel: $50/month extra can mean months or even years knocked off your plan. Use the planner to discover your personal “magic number”—the smallest extra payment that meaningfully shifts your date to debt-free.

Budgeting Without Misery

You don’t have to live on rice and air. Try these painless tweaks that free cash for your plan:

  • Lower fixed costs: Negotiate internet or phone bills. Re-quote insurance. Consider a roommate or cheaper parking.
  • Trim subscriptions: Do you really need five streaming services? (Your future self votes no.)
  • Optimize groceries: Plan simple meals, love leftovers, avoid “just browsing” the snack aisle hungry.
  • Use windfalls wisely: Tax refunds, bonuses, side-gig cash—point it at the target debt.
  • Automate payments: Set your snowball/avalanche as autopilot so willpower isn’t a monthly boss fight.

Common Roadblocks (and Friendly Fixes)

  • “Emergencies keep derailing me.” Build a starter emergency fund ($500–$1,000) first. It keeps surprise bills from boomeranging to your card.
  • “I lose motivation.” Track your payoff visually. Celebrate milestones cheaply: a picnic, a movie night at home, a silly dance to your “debt dragon slayer” playlist.
  • “Minimums dropped and I got confused.” That’s normal. The planner recalculates monthly and rolls freed-up money forward automatically.
  • “Should I close paid-off cards?” Maybe, maybe not. Closing affects credit utilization and length of history—research before you snip. You can keep the account open and inactive.

Consolidation, Balance Transfers, and Personal Loans

Balance transfers sometimes offer 0% promo APR for 12–18 months. If you can pay off the balance before the promo ends (and the fee isn’t painful), this can be a powerful accelerator. Consolidation loans move multiple debts into one fixed-rate loan—simpler payments, possibly lower APR. The planner can simulate both: add a new “debt” with the consolidated balance and the new APR; compare timelines and total interest with and without consolidation. If the savings don’t exceed fees—or if you’ll keep spending on the old cards—skip it.

What About Student Loans and Special Rules?

Some debts (student loans) have unique features: income-driven repayment, deferment, forgiveness possibilities. Use the planner for rough math and momentum, but check official program rules before making irreversible changes. You can still include these loans to see how extra payments shift your overall path to zero.

Credit Scores While Paying Off Debt

Paying down revolving balances (credit cards) usually improves utilization, which often boosts your credit score over time. On-time payments are king. Avoid opening new accounts unless it meaningfully reduces your APR and total cost.

Staying Sane: Mindset Tips

  • Pick your “why.” Freedom from stress, a first home, starting a business—write it somewhere you’ll see daily.
  • Gamify it. Each $100 chunk paid = one box colored in on your wall chart. Watching progress is addictive (the good kind).
  • Build friction for spending. Remove saved cards from websites. 30-minute rule for impulse buys. Your future self will high-five you.

Advanced Moves (When You’re Ready)

  • Biweekly payments: 26 half-payments per year = 13 full payments. Subtle, but effective.
  • Debt “ladder blend”: Start with snowball for 1–2 quick wins, then switch to avalanche for savings. The planner can model the switch point.
  • Income spikes: During high-income months, pre-schedule larger extra payments in the tool to lock in gains.
Reality check: Perfect months are rare. Missed targets happen. Don’t quit—recalculate, adjust, and keep rolling. Progress beats perfection every time.

Your First 30 Days (A Mini-Roadmap)

  • Day 1–2: List every debt (balance, APR, minimum). Add to the planner.
  • Day 3: Choose snowball or avalanche. Enter your monthly budget. Generate the plan.
  • Day 4–7: Build a $500–$1,000 starter emergency fund (sell stuff, pause extras, quick gig).
  • Week 2: Automate minimums + target payment. Delete saved cards from shopping sites.
  • Week 3: Subscription audit. Negotiate a bill. Redirect savings to your target debt.
  • Week 4: Celebrate the first milestone—cheaply—and update your chart.

Frequently Asked Feelings (It’s Not Just Numbers)

Debt can feel heavy and lonely. It’s not a moral failure—it’s math plus life. Families, medical bills, job shifts, and, yes, a few impulse treats all play a role. You’re here now, building a plan. That’s what counts. Future-you is already proud.

Wrap-Up: Small Steps, Big Freedom

Becoming debt-free is less about heroic paydays and more about consistent, boring excellence: the same payment every month, a few extra dollars when you can, and a plan that shows your effort working. Use the Debt Payoff Planner to turn “someday” into a date on the calendar. Then put on your victory playlist. The couch-crashing guest is packing their bags.

Debt Payoff Planner — Frequently Asked Questions

Practical answers about strategies, motivation, budgeting, and getting to zero debt.