Debt Snowball Calculator
Enter all your debts, choose your payoff strategy, and add any extra monthly payment you can make. The debt snowball calculator shows your exact payoff order, months until each debt is gone, total interest paid, and how much the rollover method saves you compared to paying minimums only. Switch to debt avalanche to compare the interest-saving alternative.
Debt Snowball Calculator
Add up to 10 debts. The rollover method puts freed-up payments toward the next debt automatically.
| # | Creditor / Debt Name | Balance Owed ($) | Interest Rate (%) | Min. Payment ($) |
|---|
* Assumes fixed interest rates and that freed-up payments are immediately rolled over to the next debt. All extra payments go to the target debt only. Results are estimates based on inputs provided. Actual payoff may vary based on billing cycles and lender policies.
What Is the Debt Snowball Method?
The debt snowball method is a debt payoff strategy where you pay off your smallest balance first, regardless of interest rate, while making minimum payments on everything else. Once the smallest debt is gone, you take that freed-up payment and add it to the minimum on the next smallest debt. Your total monthly payment stays the same, but the amount hitting each debt grows as you clear each one, like a snowball rolling downhill and picking up mass.
The name captures the mechanics exactly: each payoff adds momentum to the next. A borrower who frees up $65/month from clearing a credit card adds that $65 to the next debt's minimum, accelerating payoff on a larger balance. Repeat the process across every debt and the final balance receives an enormous combined payment, dramatically cutting the time and interest required to close it out.
How to Use This Debt Snowball Calculator
Debt Snowball vs. Debt Avalanche: Which Should You Use?
These two strategies use the same rollover mechanic but different ordering. The snowball orders by smallest balance. The avalanche orders by highest interest rate. Both eliminate debt faster than minimums-only. The right choice comes down to your psychology more than your math.
| Debt Snowball | Debt Avalanche | |
|---|---|---|
| Payoff order | Smallest balance first | Highest interest rate first |
| Total interest paid | Slightly more | Least possible |
| Time to debt-free | Slightly longer | Shortest possible |
| First win | Fast (first small debt cleared quickly) | Slower (first debt may be large) |
| Motivational design | Built for momentum and quick wins | Built for patience and math optimization |
| Completion rate | Higher (Harvard Business Review research) | Lower due to slower early progress |
| Best for | People who need visible progress to stay motivated | People with high-rate debt and strong financial discipline |
The Dollar Difference Is Smaller Than You Think
On a typical mixed debt portfolio of $25,000 spread across three to five accounts with rates ranging from 7% to 24%, the avalanche saves somewhere between $200 and $2,000 in total interest compared to the snowball. On a $15,000 portfolio at $700/month, the avalanche finishes one month faster and saves roughly $226. That is real money, but the difference between either method and paying minimums only is orders of magnitude larger. Getting into any plan matters far more than choosing the perfect plan.
How the Debt Snowball Payoff Works Step by Step
Here is a concrete example of the snowball method in action with three debts and $150/month extra:
| Debt | Balance | Rate | Min Payment | Snowball Order |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medical bill | $800 | 0% | $50 | 1st (smallest balance) |
| Credit card | $3,200 | 22.99% | $85 | 2nd |
| Personal loan | $9,500 | 11.5% | $250 | 3rd (largest balance) |
Month 1: Pay $50 (minimum) on medical bill + $150 extra = $200 toward smallest debt. Pay minimums on credit card and personal loan.
Month 5 (approx.): Medical bill paid off. Roll $50 + $150 = $200 to credit card on top of its existing $85 minimum. Now paying $285/month toward credit card.
Month 20 (approx.): Credit card paid off. Roll $285 to personal loan on top of its $250 minimum. Now paying $535/month toward personal loan.
The final debt receives the combined force of every prior payment. The personal loan closes in roughly 18 more months instead of 40+. Total time saved: approximately 22 months. Total interest saved: several thousand dollars.
How to Find Extra Money for Your Snowball
The snowball works on minimums alone, but extra monthly payments accelerate the results significantly. Common sources for extra cash to feed the snowball:
- Cut one recurring subscription or service. The average American household spends over $200/month on subscriptions, much of it unused. Cutting two or three frees up real money without lifestyle sacrifice.
- Redirect tax refunds and bonuses. The average federal tax refund in 2026 is approximately $3,100. Applied to your top snowball target, a single refund can eliminate a small debt entirely and compress the timeline by months.
- Sell unused items. A one-time payment of $500 to $1,500 from selling electronics, furniture, or clothing hits your smallest debt with a lump sum that could clear it immediately.
- Increase income temporarily. A side project, freelance work, or overtime for three to six months generates extra cash flow that compounds dramatically when fed into the snowball during the high-momentum early stages.
- Pause retirement contributions beyond the match. This is a short-term sacrifice that can make sense if your debt rate exceeds your expected investment return. Always capture any employer match first. That is an immediate 50 to 100% return.
After the Snowball: Staying Out of Debt
Clearing debt is the easy part compared to keeping it off. The behaviors that created the debt in the first place tend to return unless deliberately replaced.
Build an Emergency Fund First
The main reason people fall back into debt after paying it off is unexpected expenses hitting a zero-buffer financial situation. Before you celebrate full payoff, redirect at least one month of snowball payments into a liquid emergency fund. The standard target is three to six months of essential expenses. With that cushion in place, a car repair or medical bill becomes an inconvenience rather than a credit card charge.
Keep the Snowball Payment Alive
When the last debt closes, the total snowball payment you've been making each month is real cash flow you've already learned to live without. Redirect it to savings, investments, or retirement. The same discipline that beat debt builds wealth when pointed in the other direction.
Use Credit Intentionally
Credit cards are useful tools when paid in full monthly. The problem with credit cards is the gap between spending and consequence. Keeping a zero balance means you use the rewards and the float without ever paying interest. Build a simple monthly budget, spend within it, and treat the credit card as a payment method rather than a borrowing vehicle.
