The debt-snowball method of debt repayment is a form of debt management that is most often applied to repaying revolving credit — such as credit cards. Debt is that which is owed usually referencing Assets owed but the term can cover other obligations Revolving credit is a type of credit that does not have a fixed number of payments in contrast to Installment credit. A credit card is part of a system of Payments named after the small Plastic card issued to users of the system This method has gained more recognition recently due to the fact that it is the primary debt-reduction method taught by many financial and wealth experts.
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The basic steps in the debt snowball method are as follows:
In theory, by the time the final debts are reached, the extra amount paid toward the larger debts will grow quickly, similar to a snowball rolling downhill gathering more snow (thus the name). The theory works as much on human psychology as it does on finance; by paying the smaller bills first, the individual, couple, or family sees fewer incoming payment requests as more bills are paid off, thus giving ongoing positive feedback on their progress towards eliminating their debt.
All retirement contributions are to be halted during the debt snowball, thus freeing up more money to pay down the debt snowball. Many dispute this practice, citing the cost of compounding interest to be greater than the gains of paying off debt. Some compromise by reducing retirement contributions to only what a company will match with an employee. Many financial and wealth experts teach that this halting of retirement contributions should last no more than two years.
A first home mortgage is not generally included in the debt snowball, but is instead paid off as part of one's larger financial plan. As an example, many financial plan's pay off home mortgages in a later step, along with any other debt which is equal to or greater than half of one's annual take-home pay.
Ignoring interest rates, let's pretend you have the following debt (along with the minimum payments):
Your minimum payments for all debt would be $401 per month. You would order your debts in the following order (lowest to highest):
Now, assuming you had $100 extra per month to send in, you would apply that $100 to the Credit Card A so that the payment for it would be $125 per month and the other debt would receive the minimums.
After Credit Card A is paid off (in two months), you would apply the extra $100 to Credit Card B PLUS the $25 you were sending in to Credit Card A. So now your payment to Credit Card B would be: $26 normal minimum + $25 that you normally sent in to Credit Card A + $100 that you are able to send extra.
Your payment to Credit Card B would be $151 instead of $26. Therefore, you would pay it off much faster. Then, when Credit Card B is paid off, you would now send in the following to the Car Payment: $150 normal minimum + $25 that you normally sent in to Credit Card A + $26 that you normally sent in to Credit Card B + $100 that you are able to send extra
Your payment to Car Payment would now be $301 instead of $150.
If you didn't have $100 extra (or any extra amount) the debt snowball would be the same minus $100 per month.
People with more financial discipline can get ahead quicker by paying off the credit cards and loans with the higher interest rates first. This will minimize costs to become debt-free faster than the smallest-balance approach.
The primary benefit of the smallest-balance plan is the psychological benefit of seeing results sooner. Retirement contributions should start once your expected investment yield is higher than the next highest debt interest rate (generally 8% for a balanced portfolio). [1]