Free Debt Payoff Planner
See your debt-free date — and the smartest debt to pay first.
Add your real balances, rates, and what you can put toward debt each month. In seconds you'll see snowball vs. avalanche, the month your last payment lands, and how much interest each path costs you.
- · No signup
- · Nothing leaves your phone
- · Compare both methods
- · Educational estimate
What you'll see
- Debt-free by
- Month / Year
- First debt paid
- Your smallest balance
- Total interest
- Your estimate
- Snowball vs. Avalanche
- Side-by-side
Step 1: Add your debts and your monthly budget
List every credit card, loan, and bill you're paying on. Pull your latest statements for the most accurate plan. You can edit anything later.
Which method should we show first?
How this works (and what to keep in mind)
How we calculate
We accrue interest monthly on each balance using your APR, pay every minimum first, then send anything extra to the snowball target (smallest balance) or avalanche target (highest APR). Repeat until every balance hits zero.
Keep paying every minimum
Don't skip a minimum payment on the debts you aren't focusing on — that's how late fees and credit-score hits sneak in. The plan only works when every minimum still goes out on time.
It's an estimate, not a promise
Real life moves around — balances change, fees post, rates adjust, life happens. Re-run this every month or two with fresh numbers so the date stays honest.
Educational only
UpTrendCredit isn't a lender, credit bureau, credit-repair company, or financial advisor. Use this to think clearly, not as personalized financial, legal, or tax advice.
How to use this tool
- Add every debt with a balance
Credit cards, personal loans, BNPL, store cards, medical. Skip mortgage and student loans — they're a different conversation.
- Enter the APR and minimum payment for each
All from your latest statement. Don't estimate — small APR differences change the payoff order.
- Set your total monthly budget
What you can realistically send to all debts combined, including minimums.
- Compare snowball vs. avalanche side by side
Avalanche almost always wins on interest. Snowball wins on completion rates. Pick the one you'll actually finish.
- Download or share your plan
Save the PDF as your month-by-month checklist, and re-run any time a balance or rate changes.
Expected timeline: 5 minutes to set up. Most plans show debt-free in 18–48 months at a realistic budget; the first card hits $0 in 2–6 months with snowball.
- Minimum payments shrink as balances drop — the planner uses your fixed monthly budget so the extra automatically rolls to the next debt.
- Don't add new debt while you're executing the plan, or your timeline resets.
- A balance-transfer card can shortcut the math — re-run the planner with the new APR to see how much faster you finish.
Frequently asked questions
What is the debt snowball method?
The debt snowball pays off your smallest balance first while you keep making minimum payments on everything else. Once that small debt is gone, you roll its payment into the next-smallest balance. The point is quick wins that keep you going.What is the debt avalanche method?
The debt avalanche pays off the debt with the highest interest rate first while you make minimum payments on the rest. You still roll each payment into the next-highest rate. The point is to pay less interest overall and finish a little sooner.Which method saves more money?
Avalanche almost always saves more money because it kills your most expensive interest first. Snowball can cost a little more, but it gives you a paid-off account sooner, which helps people who need the motivation to keep going.Which method helps motivation more?
Snowball usually wins on motivation. Watching a real debt disappear in the first few months gives most people a confidence boost. If you've tried and stalled before, snowball is often the safer pick.What if I can only add a little extra each month?
Even an extra $25 or $50 a month makes a real difference because every dollar above the minimum goes straight to principal. Use the scenario buttons on this page to see exactly how a small extra payment shortens your payoff and cuts interest.