Snowball Your Debt
Debt payoff guide

The Debt Snowball Method, Without the Hype

Pay minimums on every active debt, focus extra money on the smallest balance, then roll that freed payment into the next debt.

By Christopher CarrollUpdated July 8, 20269 minute read

The core rule: order debts from smallest balance to largest. Keep every required minimum current. Send only genuinely available extra money to the smallest active debt.

How the debt snowball works

1

List every active debt

Record the balance, minimum payment, APR, and due date. Leave recurring household bills out of the payoff order.

2

Sort by balance

The smallest remaining balance becomes the target. APR does not determine the snowball order.

3

Pay every minimum

Keep all active accounts current while directing extra money to one target.

4

Roll the payment forward

When a debt reaches zero, add its old monthly payment to the next target instead of absorbing it into everyday spending.

A six-debt snowball example

OrderDebtBalanceMinimum
1Medical bill$420$35
2Store card$780$45
3Personal loan$2,100$110
4Credit card$4,600$145
5Auto loan$9,800$325
6Student loan$18,500$210

If $100 extra is available, Debt 1 receives $135 per month. After it is paid, Debt 2 receives its $45 minimum plus the freed $35 and the same $100 extra, for $180 per month. The payment grows as each debt disappears.

Snowball versus avalanche

Snowball

Orders debts by balance. It can produce faster visible wins and free small monthly payments sooner.

Avalanche

Orders debts by APR. The math may show lower total interest, especially when the highest-rate balance is large.

Neither method excuses late essential bills or missing minimums. A hybrid approach can address an urgent high-rate debt first, then return to smallest-balance order.

Minimum payments are not failure. Paying minimums on the non-target debts is part of the method. It protects the plan while one target receives the extra money.

When extra payments are safe

Before sending more to debt, account for the bills assigned to the current paycheck and basic living costs. A small emergency buffer can keep one car repair from going back onto a paid-down card. The math shows the payoff opportunity only after those needs are visible.

Frequently asked questions

What if two debts have the same balance?

Use the higher APR, smaller minimum, or whichever account creates the clearest win as a tie breaker. Consistency matters more than the tie.

Should I close a card after paying it off?

That decision can affect credit utilization and account history. Consider fees, temptation to reuse the card, and your credit goals before deciding.

Can the snowball include BNPL balances?

Yes, if they are debts with remaining balances. List each active plan clearly so small payments do not disappear from view.

Run your own numbers

Use the free calculator to order debts, see the current target, and check which paycheck has room before planning extra payments.

Use the debt snowball calculator

Educational information only. Results are estimates based on the information entered and do not replace individualized financial advice.