High-interest debt is one of the greatest threats to financial wellbeing. Our debt management tools help you analyze your debt load, choose the most effective payoff strategy, evaluate consolidation options, and calculate exactly how long freedom from debt will take.
Mathematically, the debt avalanche (highest interest rate first) minimizes total interest paid. Psychologically, the debt snowball (smallest balance first) provides quick wins that keep motivation high. Research shows both work—the best choice is the one you will stick with.
If debt interest rate exceeds expected investment returns, pay off debt first. For credit cards (18–26% APR), aggressively pay down debt. For student loans under 6% or mortgages, investing in a diversified portfolio may produce better long-term results—though guaranteed debt reduction vs uncertain investment returns is a personal risk decision.
Debt consolidation combines multiple debts into one, ideally at a lower interest rate, simplifying payments. Options include personal loans, balance transfer cards, home equity loans, and debt management plans through nonprofits. Consolidation helps only if you address the spending behavior that created the debt.
Contact creditors immediately—many offer hardship programs with temporarily reduced payments or interest rates. Consider a nonprofit credit counseling agency (look for NFCC members). Bankruptcy is a last resort but provides legal protection and a path to financial recovery.
DTI = total monthly debt payments ÷ gross monthly income. For mortgage qualification, most lenders want a back-end DTI (all debts) below 36–43%. To improve DTI, pay down debts before applying for new credit.