Two people each have $25,000 in debt spread across 4 credit cards. They both commit to paying $800/month total. One uses Avalanche. One uses Snowball. Five years later, one of them has paid $3,200 more in interest than the other. Which one are you?
What is the Avalanche Method?
The Debt Avalanche method means paying minimum payments on all your debts, then putting every extra dollar toward the debt with the highest interest rate first — regardless of balance size.
Once that high-interest debt is gone, you roll its payment into the next highest-rate debt. Like an avalanche, momentum builds from the top (highest rate) down.
Best for: People motivated by saving money and who want to minimize total interest paid.
What is the Snowball Method?
The Debt Snowball method means paying minimum payments on all debts, then putting every extra dollar toward the debt with the smallest balance first — regardless of interest rate.
Once the smallest debt is paid off, you roll that payment into the next smallest. Like a snowball rolling downhill, your "payment power" grows with each debt eliminated.
Best for: People who need psychological wins to stay motivated, or who have many small debts cluttering their finances.
Real Numbers: $25,000 Debt Portfolio Example
Here's a realistic scenario with 4 debts and $800/month total budget:
| Debt | Balance | APR | Min Payment |
| Chase Sapphire | $4,200 | 24.99% | $105 |
| Capital One | $6,800 | 21.49% | $170 |
| Discover | $3,100 | 18.99% | $78 |
| Personal Loan | $10,900 | 14.5% | $250 |
Avalanche result: Paid off in 42 months, total interest: $8,140
Snowball result: Paid off in 43 months, total interest: $9,630
The Avalanche saved $1,490 more in this scenario — and paid off only 1 month earlier. The difference varies based on your specific debt mix. Use our calculator to compare both for YOUR situation.
Which Should You Choose?
Choose Avalanche if: You're disciplined, comfortable with math, and your highest-rate debt isn't impossibly large. The math is on your side.
Choose Snowball if: You've tried before and given up. You have many small debts. You need the dopamine hit of seeing a debt disappear completely. Research shows that many people actually save more with Snowball because they stick with it longer.
The best method is the one you'll follow through on. Use our free calculator above to compare both strategies with your exact numbers right now.