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Canada Debt payoff calculator

Compare snowball vs. avalanche strategies and find your fastest path to debt-free.

By Ward Last reviewed Methodology

Your debts

Total debt
$14,600.00

Snowball

Lowest balance first — faster wins, motivation boost
Debt-free in
3y 6m
Total interest
$3,872.24

Avalanche

Highest rate first — mathematically optimal
Debt-free in
3y 5m
Total interest
$3,522.00
Avalanche saves $350.25 in interest vs. Snowball.
Want the full picture? Debt Snowball vs. Avalanche: Which Is Better? →

How debt-payoff strategies are calculated

Both methods make the minimum payment on every debt each month, then put any extra dollars toward exactly one debt at a time. The methods differ only in which debt to target first.

Snowball method

Target the debt with the smallest balance first. Once it's paid off, roll its entire payment (minimum + extra) into the next-smallest debt, and so on. Each payoff frees up cash for the next, building momentum.

Avalanche method

Target the debt with the highest interest rate first, regardless of balance. Once it's paid, move to the next-highest rate. This minimises total interest paid.

Which is better?

Avalanche always pays less total interest — sometimes by hundreds, sometimes by thousands. The math is unambiguous.

But a widely-cited Kellogg School study (Gal & McShane, 2012) found people on the snowball method were significantly more likely to stay on plan and become debt-free. Early payoffs create motivation that compounds — and a slightly more expensive plan you complete beats an optimal plan you abandon.

The calculator above shows the exact dollar difference between the two for your debts. If avalanche only saves a few hundred dollars, take snowball — the motivation is worth more than the math. If avalanche saves $1,000+, the math probably wins.

Worked example

Three debts, $200/month extra payment:

Both methods happen to target the same order — credit cards tend to have higher rates and smaller balances. When debt sizes and rates align, the strategies converge.

Pay off debt or invest?

General rule: pay off debt with an interest rate higher than your expected after-tax investment return (typically anything above 6–7%). Lower-rate debt — most mortgages, federal student loans — can usually be carried while investing. Always capture employer 401(k) match first; that's a guaranteed 50–100% return that beats almost any debt rate.

Common mistakes

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Frequently asked questions

What is the debt snowball method?
The snowball method pays off your smallest debt first while making minimums on the rest, then rolls that payment into the next-smallest debt, and so on. It costs slightly more in total interest than the avalanche method but produces quick wins that keep people motivated — proven in behavioral studies to result in higher debt-payoff completion rates.
What is the debt avalanche method?
The avalanche method targets the debt with the highest interest rate first while making minimums on others. It mathematically minimises total interest paid and shortens the payoff timeline slightly. The downside is psychological — if your highest-rate debt is also your largest, it can take a long time to see any debt fully paid off.
Which is better — snowball or avalanche?
Avalanche saves more interest mathematically; snowball produces more behavioral success. The calculator above shows you the exact dollar difference between the two for your debts. If the avalanche saves less than a few hundred dollars vs. snowball, the motivation boost of snowball is usually worth more than the math difference.
Should I pay off debt or invest?
Rule of thumb: pay off debt with an interest rate higher than your expected after-tax investment return (typically anything above 6–7%). Lower-rate debt — most mortgages, federal student loans — can usually be carried while investing. Always capture any employer 401(k) match first, even before paying off high-rate debt.
How long will it take me to be debt-free?
The calculator above shows your exact debt-free date for both snowball and avalanche, based on your debts and the extra payment you can afford. Even small extras compound: an extra $100/month on a typical credit-card balance can cut the payoff time by years and save thousands in interest.

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