How to Get Out of Debt: A Complete Step-by-Step Guide
Key Takeaways
– List every debt with its balance, interest rate, and minimum payment
– Choose a payoff strategy: avalanche (highest interest first) or snowball (smallest balance first)
– Free up extra money by cutting expenses and increasing income
– Automate payments to stay consistent
– Average American household carries $104,000+ in total debt — you’re not alone
Table of Contents
- Assess Your Debt Situation
- The Debt Avalanche Method
- The Debt Snowball Method
- Which Method Should You Choose?
- Debt Consolidation Options
- How to Free Up Extra Money for Debt
- Negotiating with Creditors
- Creating Your Debt Payoff Timeline
- Staying Motivated on Your Debt-Free Journey
- FAQ
Assess Your Debt Situation
Before you can create a plan, you need to know exactly what you’re dealing with. Most people underestimate their total debt because they avoid looking at the full picture.
Grab a notebook or spreadsheet and list every single debt:
| Debt | Balance | Interest Rate | Minimum Payment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Credit Card 1 | $6,200 | 22.99% | $155 |
| Credit Card 2 | $3,400 | 18.49% | $85 |
| Car Loan | $12,500 | 6.5% | $340 |
| Student Loan | $28,000 | 5.8% | $290 |
| Medical Bill | $2,100 | 0% | $175 |
| Total | $52,200 | $1,045 |
Where to find this information:
– Credit card statements or online accounts
– Loan servicer websites
– AnnualCreditReport.com for a free credit report (shows all open accounts)
– Medical provider billing departments
Now calculate your debt-to-income ratio: Total monthly debt payments ÷ gross monthly income × 100. [INTERNAL LINK: /debt-credit/debt-to-income-ratio/]
- Under 20%: Manageable — you can tackle this with a solid plan
- 20-35%: Concerning — prioritize aggressive debt payoff
- 36-50%: Serious — consider debt consolidation or professional help
- Over 50%: Critical — consult a nonprofit credit counselor (NFCC.org)
The Debt Avalanche Method
The debt avalanche targets your highest interest rate debt first, regardless of balance. Mathematically, this saves you the most money and gets you debt-free fastest.
How It Works
- Make minimum payments on all debts
- Put every extra dollar toward the debt with the highest interest rate
- When that debt is paid off, roll its payment into the next highest interest rate debt
- Repeat until debt-free
Example
Using the debts from above, with $300/month extra to put toward debt:
Order of payoff:
1. Credit Card 1 (22.99%) — $6,200
2. Credit Card 2 (18.49%) — $3,400
3. Car Loan (6.5%) — $12,500
4. Student Loan (5.8%) — $28,000
5. Medical Bill (0%) — $2,100
Month 1: Pay minimums on everything ($1,045) + $300 extra on Credit Card 1
Month 14: Credit Card 1 paid off → now put $455/month ($155 former minimum + $300 extra) toward Credit Card 2
Month 21: Credit Card 2 paid off → roll $540/month toward Car Loan
Month 35: Car Loan paid off → roll $880/month toward Student Loan
Month 67: Student Loan paid off → roll $1,170/month toward Medical Bill
Month 69: 100% debt-free!
Total interest saved vs minimum payments only: ~$14,800
Pros
- Saves the most money on interest
- Mathematically optimal
- Fastest total payoff time
Cons
- Your highest-interest debt might also be your largest balance, meaning you won’t see a “win” for a while
- Requires discipline without quick psychological rewards
[INTERNAL LINK: /debt-credit/debt-avalanche-vs-snowball/]
The Debt Snowball Method
Popularized by Dave Ramsey, the debt snowball targets your smallest balance first, regardless of interest rate. The logic: quick wins build momentum.
How It Works
- Make minimum payments on all debts
- Put every extra dollar toward the smallest balance
- When that debt is paid off, roll its payment into the next smallest balance
- Repeat until debt-free
Example
Order of payoff (by balance):
1. Medical Bill — $2,100 (0%)
2. Credit Card 2 — $3,400 (18.49%)
3. Credit Card 1 — $6,200 (22.99%)
4. Car Loan — $12,500 (6.5%)
5. Student Loan — $28,000 (5.8%)
Month 1: Pay minimums + $300 extra on Medical Bill
Month 5: Medical Bill paid off! First win! Roll $475/month to Credit Card 2
Month 11: Credit Card 2 paid off! Roll $560/month to Credit Card 1
Month 22: Credit Card 1 paid off! Roll $715/month to Car Loan
Month 39: Car Loan paid off! Roll $1,055/month to Student Loan
Month 72: 100% debt-free!
Total interest paid: ~$3,200 more than avalanche method
Payoff time: 3 months longer than avalanche
Pros
- Quick psychological wins keep you motivated
- Simplifies decision-making
- Higher completion rate (studies show people are more likely to finish)
Cons
- Costs more in total interest
- Takes slightly longer overall
Which Method Should You Choose?
| Factor | Choose Avalanche | Choose Snowball |
|---|---|---|
| Motivation style | You’re disciplined and data-driven | You need quick wins to stay motivated |
| Interest rate spread | Large gap between highest and lowest rates | Rates are similar across debts |
| Smallest debt size | Smallest balance is still large | You have a small debt you can knock out quickly |
| Past attempts | First time tackling debt seriously | You’ve tried and quit before |
The honest truth: The best method is the one you’ll actually stick with. A “suboptimal” plan you follow beats a “perfect” plan you abandon.
Hybrid approach: Start with the snowball (knock out 1-2 small debts for momentum), then switch to avalanche for the remaining larger debts.
Use our debt payoff calculator to see your personalized payoff timeline with both methods.
Debt Consolidation Options
Consolidation means combining multiple debts into a single payment, ideally at a lower interest rate.
Balance Transfer Credit Card
- How: Transfer high-interest credit card balances to a card with a 0% introductory APR (typically 12-21 months)
- Best for: Credit card debt under $10,000 with good credit (680+)
- Watch out for: Balance transfer fees (3-5%), the promotional period ending (rate jumps to 18-25%), temptation to use the old cards
- Strategy: Divide your balance by the number of promotional months and pay that amount each month to be debt-free before the rate expires
Personal Loan (Debt Consolidation Loan)
- How: Take out a fixed-rate personal loan to pay off multiple debts
- Best for: Mixed debt types, balances $5,000-$50,000, fair to good credit
- Typical rates: 6-15% (vs 18-25% for credit cards)
- Benefits: Fixed monthly payment, fixed payoff date, lower interest rate
- Where to look: Credit unions (usually best rates), SoFi, LightStream, Marcus by Goldman Sachs
Home Equity Options (HELOC/Home Equity Loan)
- How: Borrow against your home equity at lower rates
- Best for: Large debt amounts with significant home equity
- Warning: Your home is the collateral. If you can’t pay, you could lose your home. Only consider this if you have strong financial discipline.
What NOT to Do
- Don’t use a 401(k) loan to pay off debt (you lose compound growth and may face penalties)
- Don’t use debt consolidation as a band-aid without fixing the spending habits that created the debt
- Don’t pay for debt settlement companies — many are scams. Use a free nonprofit credit counselor instead (NFCC.org)
How to Free Up Extra Money for Debt
The more money you can throw at debt, the faster you’re free. Here’s how to find extra cash:
Cut Expenses
- Audit subscriptions: Cancel what you don’t actively use ($50-200/month savings)
- Reduce dining out: Cook at home 5 days a week ($200-400/month savings)
- Lower insurance premiums: Shop around annually, bundle policies ($50-100/month)
- Negotiate bills: Call internet, phone, and insurance providers. Ask for loyalty discounts.
- Cut cable: Switch to a single streaming service ($50-100/month)
- Reduce grocery spending: Meal plan, buy generic, use cashback apps ($100-200/month)
[INTERNAL LINK: /save-money/how-to-save-money/]
Increase Income
- Sell unused items: Clothes, electronics, furniture on Facebook Marketplace, eBay, Poshmark
- Freelance your skills: Writing, design, tutoring, consulting on Fiverr, Upwork
- Delivery or rideshare: DoorDash, UberEats, Instacart
- Overtime at work: Even 5 extra hours/week adds up significantly
- Ask for a raise: If you haven’t in over a year and you’re performing well, make the case
The Power of Extra Payments
Adding just $200/month extra to a $6,200 credit card at 22.99% APR:
– Minimum payments only: 16 years to pay off, $8,300 in interest
– With $200 extra/month: 20 months to pay off, $1,400 in interest
That’s $6,900 saved and 14 years of your life back. Every extra dollar matters.
Negotiating with Creditors
Many people don’t realize you can negotiate with creditors. The worst they can say is no.
How to Lower Your Interest Rate
Call your credit card company and say:
“Hi, I’ve been a customer for [X years] and I’ve been making consistent payments. I’ve received offers from other card companies at lower rates. I’d like to request a lower APR on my account. Can you help me with that?”
Success rate: Studies show approximately 70-80% of people who ask get a reduction. Average reduction: 5-6 percentage points.
How to Negotiate a Settlement
If you’re significantly behind on payments (90+ days), creditors may accept less than the full amount:
- Know your leverage: The longer the debt is delinquent, the more negotiating power you have
- Start low: Offer 30-40% of the balance
- Get everything in writing before paying a cent
- Pay in a lump sum if possible (creditors prefer this)
- Be aware: Settled debt may be reported on your credit and forgiven amounts over $600 may be taxable
Hardship Programs
Most major creditors offer hardship programs for customers facing financial difficulty:
– Temporary reduced interest rates
– Lower minimum payments
– Waived late fees
– Payment deferral
Call and ask: “I’m experiencing financial hardship. Do you have any programs that could help me manage my payments?”
Creating Your Debt Payoff Timeline
Step-by-Step Plan
- List all debts (you did this in Step 1)
- Choose your method (avalanche or snowball)
- Determine your extra payment amount (budget review + expense cuts + extra income)
- Calculate your debt-free date using our debt payoff calculator
- Set up automatic payments for minimums + extra payment on priority debt
- Mark your debt-free date on your calendar — this is your finish line
Sample Debt Payoff Timeline
For $25,000 in credit card debt at 20% APR:
| Extra Monthly Payment | Payoff Time | Total Interest Paid |
|---|---|---|
| $0 (minimums only) | 30+ years | $48,000+ |
| $200/month extra | 5 years | $12,800 |
| $500/month extra | 3 years | $7,200 |
| $1,000/month extra | 1.8 years | $4,100 |
Staying Motivated on Your Debt-Free Journey
Paying off debt is a marathon, not a sprint. Here’s how to keep going:
Visualize your progress. Print a debt payoff thermometer or tracker. Color it in as you make progress. Seeing the visual change is powerful.
Calculate your “freedom number.” How much income are you currently sending to debt payments each month? That’s the money you’ll get back. Imagine what $1,045/month could do for your life.
Celebrate milestones. Set rewards for every $1,000 or $5,000 paid off. A nice dinner (within budget), a day off, a small treat.
Find your community. Join r/debtfree on Reddit, follow #debtfreecommunity on Instagram, or find a local financial accountability group.
Track your net worth monthly. Watching your net worth climb from negative to positive is incredibly motivating.
Remember your “why.” Write it on a sticky note on your credit card: “I’m paying this off so I can [your goal].”
Don’t add new debt. Freeze your credit cards (literally put them in a block of ice) or lock them in your banking app. Use cash or debit only during your payoff journey.
FAQ
How long does it take to get out of debt?
It depends on your total debt, interest rates, and how much extra you can pay. As a general guideline: most people with $10,000-$30,000 in credit card debt can become debt-free in 2-4 years with a focused plan and consistent extra payments. Use our debt payoff calculator for your personalized timeline.
Should I save money while paying off debt?
Yes — build a small emergency fund first ($1,000-$2,000) before aggressively paying debt. Without this cushion, any unexpected expense will go right back on a credit card, undoing your progress. Once you have a starter emergency fund, focus all extra money on debt. After becoming debt-free, build your full 3-6 month emergency fund. [INTERNAL LINK: /save-money/how-to-build-emergency-fund/]
Does debt consolidation hurt your credit score?
Initially, your score may dip slightly (hard credit inquiry + new account). However, debt consolidation often improves your credit score over time by lowering your credit utilization ratio and establishing consistent on-time payments. The key is to not run up new balances on the cards you paid off.
What if I can’t afford my minimum payments?
Contact your creditors immediately — don’t ignore the problem. Ask about hardship programs, reduced payment plans, or forbearance. You can also contact a nonprofit credit counseling agency (NFCC.org) for free help. They can negotiate with creditors on your behalf and set up a Debt Management Plan (DMP) with reduced interest rates.
Is it better to pay off debt fast or invest?
Generally, pay off high-interest debt first (anything over 7-8%). The guaranteed “return” of eliminating 20% credit card interest beats average stock market returns of 7-10%. However, always contribute enough to your 401(k) to get the full employer match — that’s an instant 50-100% return you shouldn’t leave on the table. [INTERNAL LINK: /investing/how-to-start-investing/]
Can I negotiate my debt down?
Yes, especially if you’re behind on payments. Credit card companies, medical providers, and collection agencies often accept 30-60% of the original balance as a settlement. Always get the agreement in writing before paying, and be aware that forgiven debt over $600 may count as taxable income.
Ready to see your debt-free date? Use our free debt payoff calculator to compare the avalanche and snowball methods with your actual numbers.
[INTERNAL LINK: /debt-credit/debt-avalanche-vs-snowball/] | [INTERNAL LINK: /debt-credit/how-to-pay-off-credit-card-debt/] | [INTERNAL LINK: /debt-credit/how-to-improve-credit-score/]
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