When facing multiple debts, choosing the right repayment strategy can save hundreds or even thousands of pounds in interest charges. Two popular approaches dominate the conversation: the debt snowball method and the debt avalanche method. Understanding the mathematical differences between these strategies can help you make an informed decision about which path might work better for your situation.
Understanding the Two Methods
Both the snowball and avalanche methods involve making minimum payments on all debts while putting extra money toward one specific debt at a time. The key difference lies in which debt you prioritize.
The Debt Snowball Method focuses on paying off the smallest balance first, regardless of interest rate. Once the smallest debt is cleared, you roll that payment into the next smallest balance, creating a "snowball" effect as your available payment amount grows with each debt eliminated.
The Debt Avalanche Method targets the highest interest rate first, regardless of balance size. After clearing the highest-rate debt, you move to the debt with the next highest rate, mathematically minimizing the total interest paid over time.
The Mathematical Fact: Interest Cost Difference
Here's the fundamental truth about these two methods: the avalanche method will always result in paying less total interest than the snowball method, assuming you maintain consistent payments throughout the repayment period.
This isn't a matter of opinion or preference—it's pure mathematics. By eliminating high-interest debt first, you reduce the amount of interest being charged more quickly, which compounds over time to create substantial savings.
However, the amount saved varies dramatically based on your specific debt profile. The difference might be negligible for some situations or could amount to thousands of pounds for others.
Real-World Comparison Example
Imagine you have three debts and £500 total monthly to pay across them (£200 extra above minimums):
| Debt Name | Balance | Interest (APR) | Min Payment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Credit Card A | £5,000 | 24.9% | £150 |
| Credit Card B | £3,000 | 19.9% | £90 |
| Personal Loan | £2,000 | 9.9% | £60 |
Here is how the two strategies compare mathematically:
| Strategy | Payoff Order | Total Interest Paid | Time to Debt Free |
|---|---|---|---|
| Snowball | Loan → Card B → Card A | £2,653 | ~26 Months |
| Avalanche | Card A → Card B → Loan | £2,150 | ~25 Months |
The avalanche method saves approximately £503 in interest and gets you debt-free one month faster—a mathematical advantage that comes purely from the order in which debts are eliminated.
When Interest Savings Are Significant
The avalanche method provides the most substantial savings in specific situations:
- Large interest rate spreads: When your debts have widely varying interest rates (such as a 24% credit card alongside a 6% personal loan), the avalanche method's advantage becomes more pronounced.
- Higher overall debt levels: With larger total balances, the compounding effect of interest works more aggressively. Eliminating high-rate debt early prevents months or years of compound interest charges.
- Longer repayment timelines: The more time it takes to become debt-free, the more opportunity interest has to accumulate. Over multi-year repayment plans, avalanche savings can reach into the thousands.
- Multiple high-interest debts: If you're carrying several high-APR credit cards or payday loans, prioritizing by rate can make a substantial difference to your total cost.
When Interest Savings Are Minimal
In certain scenarios, the mathematical advantage of the avalanche method becomes less significant:
- Similar interest rates: If all your debts carry roughly the same APR (for example, several credit cards all between 19-22%), the method you choose makes minimal financial difference.
- Small total debt amounts: With modest balances that will be cleared quickly, the total interest difference between methods might only be £50-£100.
- Very aggressive repayment plans: If you're putting substantial extra payments toward debt each month, you'll clear everything quickly regardless of method, reducing the time for interest differences to accumulate.
The Psychological Factor
While the avalanche method wins mathematically, the snowball method offers a different advantage: psychological momentum. Clearing an entire debt—even a small one—provides a tangible win. Seeing an account balance hit zero and closing that account can deliver motivation that pure mathematics cannot.
Research in behavioural economics suggests that small, frequent wins can be more motivating than delayed larger rewards. If you've struggled with debt repayment motivation in the past, the psychological benefits of the snowball method might outweigh the mathematical efficiency of the avalanche approach.
The best debt repayment method is ultimately the one you'll actually follow through to completion.
Hybrid Approaches
You're not strictly limited to one method or the other. Some people use hybrid strategies:
- Modified Snowball: Follow the snowball method but make an exception for any debt with an exceptionally high interest rate (such as a payday loan at 300% APR).
- Quick Wins First: Clear one or two small debts quickly for motivation, then switch to avalanche method for the remaining larger debts.
- Rate-Threshold Avalanche: Prioritize any debt above a certain rate (say, 20% APR) first, then use snowball method for the rest.
Calculating Your Personal Scenario
Generic examples are useful for understanding concepts, but your specific debt situation is unique. The actual difference in total interest paid depends on your exact balances, rates, and your total monthly budget.
Using the Debt Payoff Planner allows you to input your specific debts and compare the two methods with your actual numbers. You can see precisely how many months each method would take and the exact total interest cost for each approach.
Beyond Snowball and Avalanche
While these two methods dominate discussions, other considerations matter:
- Balance transfers: Moving high-interest debt to 0% promotional rate cards can dramatically reduce interest costs.
- Debt consolidation: Combining multiple debts into a single lower-rate loan can simplify payments.
- Negotiating with creditors: Some creditors may reduce interest rates or settle for less than the full balance.
- Income increases: Focus on increasing income (through overtime or side work) to accelerate any repayment method. If your income increases significantly, be aware of the 60% Tax Trap which can affect higher earners in the UK. You can check your actual net gain using the Take Home Pay Calculator.
Consistency Matters More Than Method
Whether you choose snowball, avalanche, or a hybrid approach, consistency in making payments is more important than the method itself. Missing payments, making only minimums, or abandoning your plan partway through will cost far more than choosing the "suboptimal" mathematical method.
A snowball plan you complete beats an avalanche plan you abandon.
Monitoring Progress
Whichever method you choose, tracking your progress provides motivation and accountability. Recording monthly balances, calculating progress percentages, and visualizing your debt-free date can reinforce positive financial behaviours. Many people find that the simple act of having a clear plan transforms their relationship with debt from overwhelming to manageable.