The avalanche strategy minimizes the total interest you pay over the debt payoff period; the snowball strategy maximizes the number of accounts you close in the early months. Both are better than making only minimum payments, and the right one depends on whether interest savings or psychological wins matter more to you. This concept covers the comparison in practical terms that make the choice straightforward.
The debt avalanche method prioritizes paying off debts with the highest interest rates first to minimize total interest paid, while the debt snowball method targets the smallest balances first to build psychological momentum through quick wins. Both are valid strategies, but the optimal choice depends on your specific debt profile and behavioral tendencies.
For anyone carrying multiple debts, choosing the wrong strategy can cost thousands of dollars or lead to abandonment — and AI can model both approaches side-by-side with your actual numbers to show the true cost and timeline difference before you commit.
Prompt ChatGPT: 'I have three debts: a $2,200 credit card at 24% APR, a $7,500 personal loan at 11% APR, and a $900 store card at 29% APR. I can put $400/month toward debt payoff. Show me the total interest paid and payoff date for both the avalanche and snowball strategies, then recommend which fits someone who tends to quit financial plans.'
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.