How to Get Out of Debt: Snowball vs. Avalanche and Every Other Strategy (2026)

Getting out of debt is mostly a math problem with a behavioral solution. The math is straightforward: spend less than you earn, and direct the difference toward your debt. The hard part is choosing a payoff strategy, staying consistent, and resisting the temptation to accumulate new debt while paying off the old. This guide covers every practical method to accelerate your debt payoff, from the two most-used repayment strategies to balance transfer tactics and income moves.

Start with a Complete Debt Inventory

List every debt you carry. For each one, record:

  • Current balance
  • Interest rate (APR)
  • Minimum monthly payment
  • Type of debt (credit card, student loan, auto loan, medical bill, personal loan)

Add up the total. Knowing the exact number — without rounding — creates mental clarity and prevents the “I’ll deal with it later” avoidance loop.

The Avalanche Method: Minimize Total Interest

List your debts by interest rate, highest to lowest. Pay minimums on everything except the highest-rate debt. Direct every extra dollar toward that top debt. When it reaches zero, roll the payment into the next-highest-rate debt. Repeat until everything is paid off.

The avalanche is mathematically optimal — it minimizes the total interest you pay over the life of your debts. If you have a credit card at 22% APR and a personal loan at 10%, the credit card costs more than twice as much per dollar borrowed. Eliminating it first is the financially correct move.

The Snowball Method: Build Momentum

List debts by balance, smallest to largest, and attack the smallest balance first regardless of interest rate. Pay minimums on everything else while throwing extra money at the smallest balance. When it is gone, roll the payment into the next-smallest balance.

The snowball costs more in interest than the avalanche over the same time period. But research from multiple behavioral studies shows it leads to higher completion rates for some people. The psychological win of eliminating an entire account drives motivation. If you have tried and failed with the avalanche approach, try the snowball — completing the payoff matters more than optimizing the math.

Balance Transfers: Eliminate Interest Temporarily

If you have high-interest credit card debt and good credit (670+), a balance transfer card with a 0% introductory APR period (typically 12–21 months) lets you pay down principal without interest accumulating. Most cards charge a 3%–5% transfer fee, but that is usually far less than the interest you would pay at 20%+ APR.

Requirement: you must pay off the transferred balance within the promotional window, or the remaining balance reverts to the standard APR. Do not use the new card for purchases during the promotional period — many cards apply payments to the 0% transferred balance first, leaving new purchases to accumulate interest.

Consolidate High-Interest Debt with a Personal Loan

A debt consolidation loan replaces multiple high-interest debts with a single fixed-rate installment loan, typically at a lower rate than credit cards. If you have multiple cards at 18%–25% APR and can qualify for a personal loan at 10%–14%, consolidation reduces your total interest cost and simplifies your payments to one monthly bill.

The risk: once the cards are paid off, do not use them to accumulate new balances. Consolidation only works if you change the behavior that created the debt.

Increase Income to Accelerate Payoff

Every extra dollar earned can go directly to debt. Options worth considering:

  • Negotiate a raise — the highest-leverage single move if you are underpaid relative to market
  • Take on overtime or a second shift temporarily
  • Sell items you no longer use (furniture, electronics, clothing)
  • Freelance work in your existing skill set
  • Gig economy work (delivery, rideshare) for short-term bursts of extra income

The goal is not a permanent lifestyle change — just a 6–18 month sprint to eliminate debt faster than income alone would allow.

Cut Spending to Free Up Cash Flow

Identify fixed costs you can reduce permanently: housing, car payment, insurance premiums, subscription services. Even $200/month freed up from expenses compounds significantly over 12 months. One-time spending cuts are less powerful than permanently reducing a recurring cost.

Stop Adding New Debt

You cannot fill a leaking bucket. While paying down debt, avoid using credit cards for discretionary spending you cannot pay off in full the same month. Switch to debit or cash for categories where you overspend. The payoff strategy only works if the balances are actually declining month over month.

What to Do About Medical Debt

Medical debt operates differently from consumer debt. Many hospitals have financial assistance programs — ask the billing department directly whether your balance qualifies for reduction or forgiveness. Medical debt under $500 was removed from credit reports in 2023; higher balances still appear but lenders treat medical debt differently from credit card debt. Negotiate the balance down before paying — medical bills are often negotiable, especially for large amounts.

Bottom Line

Pick the avalanche if you want to minimize total interest paid, the snowball if you need quick wins to stay motivated. Use balance transfers or consolidation loans where they reduce rates meaningfully. Apply every windfall and income increase to debt until the balances are gone. The strategy matters less than staying consistent — any method executed without interruption will get you out of debt.