Debt

Debt Snowball vs Debt Avalanche: Which Method Actually

The definitive comparison of debt snowball vs debt avalanche in 2026. Real math, psychology research, and which strategy saves you more money. With.

Kike Faúndez
Written by
Founder of CashControlly
Published on 9 min read
Debt9 min read

Two strategies dominate the personal finance debate on debt payoff — and they produce radically different results depending on your personality and debt portfolio. This guide gives you the math and the psychology to choose correctly.

The core difference

The debt snowball (popularized by Dave Ramsey) targets your smallest balance first regardless of interest rate. The debt avalanche targets your highest interest rate first. Same total payments — different order, different total interest paid.

The math: avalanche wins, always

On a $30,000 debt portfolio (mix of student loans, credit cards, auto), the avalanche method typically saves $1,200–$4,800 in interest compared to snowball. The spread widens with higher rates and larger balances.

🧮 Snowball vs Avalanche Calculator

The psychology: snowball wins for most people

A 2016 Harvard Business Review study found that people who paid off small debts first were more likely to eliminate all their debt. The "quick win" of zeroing out a balance triggers dopamine that sustains the behavior. For people with a history of starting and stopping debt payoff, snowball is often the better choice — not because of the math, but because of execution probability.

The hybrid approach

Start with snowball until you eliminate 1–2 small debts (momentum phase), then switch to avalanche for the high-interest balances. Many financial advisors recommend this hybrid — it captures the psychological win without sacrificing too much in interest costs.

Red flags that override the debate

  • Any debt above 20% APR → avalanche immediately, no exceptions
  • Payday loans → pay these off regardless of balance size, they compound fastest
  • Tax debt (IRS) → special rules; penalties accelerate; consult a CPA
The only wrong answer is no answer
Both snowball and avalanche destroy debt faster than minimum payments. Making any consistent extra payment — even $50/month — reduces a 10-year debt to 7 years. The method matters less than the consistency.
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About the author

Kike Faúndez
Kike Faúndez
Founder of CashControlly · Santiago, Chile

Enrique 'Kike' Faúndez is an Information Systems and Management Control Engineer from Universidad de Chile, with master’s degrees in Finance from Universidad de Chile and Industrial Engineering from Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. He has 15+ years of experience in regulated financial services across finance, operations, and digital product development. He founded CashControlly in Santiago, Chile, with the conviction that personal financial control should not be a privilege, but an accessible and well-designed tool.

Credentials
  • Master's in Finance, Universidad de Chile
  • Master's in Industrial Engineering, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
  • Information Systems and Management Control Engineer, Universidad de Chile
  • AI and ITIL certifications
  • 15+ years in regulated financial services
Learn more about the founder

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