A payoff plan needs more than a list of debts.
Debt payoff works better when bills, paychecks, due dates, future expenses, and current cash all live in the same planning routine. The dashboard helps turn a one-time calculation into a repeatable payday habit.
What the Snowball Your Debt dashboard tracks
Paycheck snapshot
See paycheck amount, bills assigned to the check, pending bills, and money left after bills.
Usable cash now
Update real cash after life happens so spending and payoff advice uses reality, not only the original plan.
Bills and debts
Track balances, payments, due dates, paid status, and the total number of bills currently on the dashboard.
Bill calendar
View bills and paydays by date so due-date clusters and heavy paychecks are easier to spot.
Smart Funds
Plan future expenses like repairs, holidays, and trips without mixing them into debt payoff totals.
Snowball Coach
Ask budget and payoff questions using the saved dashboard data as context.
Why the dashboard is noindex, but this page is indexable
The private dashboard should not appear in search results because it belongs to the signed-in user. This public page explains what the dashboard does, while the actual saved dashboard remains protected and marked noindex.
How the dashboard helps users avoid common debt app problems
Less manual work
Bills can be marked as autopay so the user can track expected draft behavior without treating every bill the same.
See what changed
Payment history and undo support help users understand changes instead of feeling trapped by one wrong click.
Remember context
Bill notes can capture things like hardship calls, expected changes, or unusual expenses.
Keep a copy
Exporting gives users a readable backup of the plan so the dashboard does not feel like the only place the information exists.
See timing
Calendar view shows paydays and due dates together, including crowded days that need attention.
Ask planning questions
The coach can explain choices using dashboard context, while still reminding users that the app does not move money.
What the dashboard does not do
The dashboard is a planning tool. It does not connect to bank accounts, make payments, guarantee lender payoff calculations, or replace professional financial advice. Users should confirm real payment status with their bank, lender, or service provider before marking a bill handled.
Start with the calculator, then use the dashboard every payday.
The calculator helps build the first plan. The dashboard helps keep that plan alive when bills are paid, cash changes, or a new expense appears.