In Praise of the Debt Snowball
Published on - September 28th, 2006 (Modified on - November 15th, 2006) (by J.D. Roth) During my twenties, I accumulated nearly $25,000 in consumer debt. I had a spending problem. With time, I was able to get my spending under control (mostly), but I still owned overwhelming debt. How could I get rid of it?
The personal finance books all suggested the same approach:
- Order your debts from highest interest rate to lowest interest rate.
- Designate a certain amount of money to pay toward debts each month.
- Pay the minimum payment on all debts except the one with the highest interest rate.
- Throw every other penny at the debt with the highest interest rate.
- When that debt is gone, do not alter the monthly amount used to pay debts, but throw all you can at the debt with the next-highest interest rate.
This made perfect sense. By doing this, I would be paying the minimum amount in interest over the long term. The trouble was, my highest-interest rate debt was also my debt with the biggest balance (a fully-maxed $12,000 credit card at 19.8% interest). I’d plug away at this debt for several months at a time, but then give up because it felt like I was never getting anywhere.
This happened over and over. I’d start and fail. Start and fail.
Then I read about the Debt Snowball method in Dave Ramsey’s The Total Money Makeover. The Debt Snowball method is similar to the traditional approach except that instead of attacking high-interest rate debts first, you attack low-balance debts first. Why? Because you’ll get the psychological lift of pinging debts off in rapid succession. And if you’re like me, this makes all the difference. The Debt Snowball approach is:
- Order your debts from lowest balance to highest balance.
- Designate a certain amount of money to pay toward debts each month.
- Pay the minimum payment on all debts except the one with the lowest balance.
- Throw every other penny at the debt with the lowest balance.
- When that debt is gone, do not alter the monthly amount used to pay debts, but throw all you can at the debt with the next-lowest balance.
(For more on this, including some actual figures, see my entry on two approaches to debt elimination.)
When I read about the Debt Snowball method, I was skeptical. I knew it would cost me more in the long run, at least on paper. But I figured I had nothing to lose. I tried it. In four months I’d paid off most of my debts. I was shocked. I’d been trying and failing for years, and now I was able to make a huge dent in just months? It was all because I had changed my approach just slightly.
Humans are complex psychological creatures. They’re not adding machines. Many of us know what we ought to do but find it difficult to actually make the best choices. If we were adding machines, we wouldn’t accumulate $20,000 in consumer debt in the first place! It’s misguided to tell somebody so deep in debt that they must follow the repayment plan that minimizes interest payments. The important thing to do is to set up a system of positive reinforcement, and that’s exactly what the Debt Snowball method does.
Which method should you choose? Do what works for you. The first method can save you money in the long-run. But if you’ve tried it and failed, give the Debt Snowball method a shot. It might be the answer you’re searching for!
This post was inspired by an entry today at Lifehacker.
This article is about Choices, Credit Cards, Debt
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[...] Get Rich Slowly – In Praise of the Debt Snowball [...]
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Ahhh I love reading these forums. My experience with paying off debt began in 2004 and took me until mid 2006 to accomplish, I had 26 creditors and a total of 44,000.00 owed. Some were smaller debts that went away quickly, I opted for the lowest bill going first, rather than by interest rates, although that did cost me more in the long run. I was so happy to see the list being pared down quickly. I learned a couple things at that time in my life, one was that once I paid that bill off, it was gone FOREVER and my phone would ring no more for that one, less mail too!! Another was, it is their money… and they just wanted it back. Thankful I live on the other side of zero today! Good luck to all
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You’ve gotta be careful about balance transfers though. Some/Alot of them only offer the 0% APR on transfers for a set period of time, say 12-14 months. If you are confident of paying off the balance in that timeframe, have at it, but if not, I’d recommend just staying with what you have, because opening up a new CC always leads to the temptation to use it. Plus if you don’t pay it off in time, you might have a larger APR than the previous card!
I’m a big proponent of the snowball method. My debt was relatively small when I started out with it almost a year ago, only about 5k on two credit cards. In the span of a year I have worked hard on paying the smaller balance. I will have paid that off as of next month and can then work on my larger balance. The feeling of accomplishment is motivation, but it takes patience and persistence!
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It is so true, if we were adding machines then we would rack up debt. However, we are humans driven by emotions, therefore we need to keep our emotions in check in order to successful achieve our financial goals.
I like this strategy
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[...] First thing I did was transfer as much as possible to 0% credit cards. So 80% or so of that $15,000 is at 0% which is huge! Second thing I am in the middle of is creating a modified debt snowball. J.D. from Get Rich Slowly has a great introductory article on it – http://www.getrichslowly.org/blog/2006/09/28/in-praise-of-the-debt-snowball/ [...]
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[...] Ask the Readers: How to Live Debt-Free?Handy Personal Finance SpreadsheetsBudget Spreadsheet CorrectionsAsk the Readers: Emergency Fund or Debt Snowball?In Praise of the Debt Snowball [...]
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I used this method but never leaned it from anyone. I just figured it out on my own. It is much easier to keep your self focused on paying off debit if you do it. An added thing to do is to try to reduce your interest rates on all your cedit cards as you pay them off. Once you pay off a card ask your credit card company to lower your interest rate or tell them that you will cancel. They will lower your rate. Then you can do a ballance transefer at a lower interest from another card to the one you just paid off. Then ask for it to be lowered in rate. This is a good way to get your interest rates lowered while doing the snowball.
I became debt free using this method. It helps if you have extra money to spend to start the snowball. If you get a pay raise you should use the added money to start your snowball. I got a contract job that paid a lot more than my old job. Then used the added funds each month for the snowball. I quickly got out of debt that way. Make sure to read the credit card fine prints when doing balance transfers.
Good luck.
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Wow. Great post, JD. Spoken like someone who has actually been through it. Well done.
We also used Ramsey’s method, and found it to be enormously successful.
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[...] a great time to reevaluate where your money is going. Here are a few ideas to get you started: create a debt snowball, create an emergency fund, or develop the habit of being [...]
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The reason the Debt Snowball works is that it fits the psychology of debtors. Many people who get themselves into debt do so by turning off their logical thinking abilities and buy ‘to make themselves feel better’. I’ve seen this in a number of friends. They’re depressed because they are in over their heads, so the go out and buy themselves something, to feel better.
The snowball, though not logical from a pure numbers standpoint, fits the profile of many of those in debt: Do what feels good. They see immediate gratification by sloughing off a whole bill, so they repeat the behavior.
My take… if it works for you, then do it!
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[...] and Blunt Money — advocate a “savings snowball”, which is based on the popular debt snowball method. When using this system, you don’t have to choose just one thing to save for at a [...]
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I agree with Dave’s Debt snowball theory in toto. I have had similar success with my own debt . I always make it a point to knock off the debt which is lowest in value and then attack the next one.. Leaves you with lesser accounts to follow and worry about,… great strategy
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When you’ve got several small debts, the snowball approach makes sense – to give you the psychological boost at each small accomplishment. But, when you have two large loans (a $300k 30-year fixed at 5.22% and a $50k HELOC variable and currently at 2.70%), paying the one with the higher interest rate saves you money. And, since neither one will be paid off anytime soon, there’s no psychological boost coming anytime soon. Should the variable rate exceed the fixed rate, all extra payments go to the variable rate from that point forward. It’s just math – unless you’re going for a psychological boost.
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[...] you can’t afford it, then pay as much as you can. Put away the card; you’re in debt. Try a debt snowball or even snowflaking. Find money in your budget to eliminate your [...]
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I’ve been working hard for the last year to pay off a credit card that had a no-interest promotional period before that period expires. Once I’ve paid it off, I had already planned to use the funds budgeted each month for that debt and start using it to pay off another credit card, but I hadn’t been able to figure out which one to pay off first (like the author, my inclination was to pay off the highest balance, but that’s so daunting!) I’m going to try attacking the lowest balance first, because (knowing myself!) I’m going to get a crazy sense of satisfaction from paying something off (even if it’s a tiny balance!) which I hope will lead me to continue my debt-attacking efforts. What a great article and tip!
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You can get the same emotional benefit by learning how to visualize your money, debt, and interest due. The debt snowball helps encourage irrational behavior instead of teaching people to act in a mathematically sound way.
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Long story short: I was looking to list toys on eBay, so I could update my toys to better toys. I have 5 older camera bodies I was going to use to get a newer camera body. Decided to do a google search on the best eBay methods to get the most dollars out of my items. That brought me to your site.
After I read your story about eBay listings, I saw your GET OUT OF DEBT button on the top right of this web site.
I started to read, and it was like I found God, or fell in love, or tasted ice cream for the first time.
I carry about 50,000 in credit card debt and that costs me about 15,000 dollars each and every year in interest.
I make a very good living, (my vocation is in the top ten of wage earners in the world today, higher than an anesthesiologists) but I am always broke maintaining my debt load, looking for more toys.
I have known about Dave Ramsey, but it never clicked for me until I saw your site.
Thank You So Much!
I pealed $1,000 out of my money clip, and it is marked EMERGENCY FUNDS, and I dated it.
The credit cards get cut up as soon as I am near them later tonight, and that smallest credit card, $800, gets paid off first thing tomorrow morning!
I am under way, and I have your site to thank.
I will still sell those camera bodies (and lots of other stuff), but not to purchase more toys, it will be to retire my debt!
Again, THANK YOU!
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I have a different, but close to approach.
My problem is that I have a lot of small debts with family and two with banks and overdue bills that just didnt get paid, and a huge chunk of student debt. While the interest rates with my family and friends are 0% they do have a lot of embarasment interest. So here is my approach:
1 call up your family and friends (to whom you owe money) and tell them about what you are doing and ask when they need the money at the latest. (a lot of my friends told me that it wasn’t important that they got the money right now)
2 Prioritize those loans after time and how well of they are. (My dad, and my “rich” grandfather got a low priority and my poor student friends got a high one)
3 give out as much information to your family about when you can pay them back as possible. (If they know when the money is comming they wont be asking)
4 then pay off the high intrest loans first as the books say
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This post resonated with me because I had a similar approach to paying down my debt.
About a year ago, I owed two credit card debts totalling around $12,000 and two student loan debts with a total of around $10,000. I was making minimum payments on both. The interest on the credit cards was around 18%, while the student loans were around 7-8%. Logically, I should have paid the high-interest credit cards off first, but I decided instead to put any spare money I had into the student loans. The reason was that the minimum payments were much higher on the student loans. If I paid them off first, I would then have that amount I was currently putting toward student loans available for other things.
This ended up being a good strategy, because I could now make much bigger progress paying down my student loans. I could see the difference each month. I could visualize the exact month when both loans would be paid off, and the money I was currently putting toward the minimum payments would actually be mine to use for savings, for the credit cards, for necessities or just for us each month.
The last payment on the loans was made last month. And yes, the credit cards are still around, but I’m now able to put $5-600/month extra toward them from the minimum payments I used to put on the loans, plus whatever extra comes in from my own after-hours business. I suspect they’ll both be gone within a year.
Sure, I probably paid an extra $1,000 or more in the short-term. But in the long term, *all* my debt will be gone within two years and I now have an emergency kitty of $5-600 each month which I *choose* to put toward credit cards.
I feel like I’m in control of my money now and that I’m capable of thinking about it strategically, setting goals and achieving them. So much of money management is psychological. The first step was getting back the confidence that I could plan well.
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