How to Prepare Debt Payoff Plan — Snowball vs Avalanche Method

Practical guide to debt repayment. Comparison of snowball and avalanche debt methods. Learn which strategy is better for you.

11 min czytania

Why Do You Need a Debt Payoff Plan?

Without a plan, debts grow like a snowball — but in the wrong direction. Interest charged on multiple obligations simultaneously can make your balance barely move despite regular payments. A payoff plan gives control, motivation, and a concrete date for debt freedom.

Step 1: Take Debt Inventory

Before choosing a strategy, list all your obligations:

Debt Balance Interest Rate Minimum Payment
Credit card 8,000 PLN 21% 200 PLN
Personal loan 25,000 PLN 12% 650 PLN
Family loan 5,000 PLN 0% 200 PLN
Installment loan 3,000 PLN 10% 150 PLN

Step 2: Choose Your Strategy

Snowball Method

You pay off the smallest debt first, regardless of interest rate. When you pay it off, you direct all freed-up amount to the next smallest.

How it works (example):

  1. Pay minimum on all debts
  2. Direct surplus to 3,000 PLN debt (smallest)
  3. After paying it off — 150 PLN + surplus goes to 5,000 PLN debt
  4. And so on, until you pay everything off

Pros:

  • Quick sense of success — first debt disappears fast
  • Builds motivation and payment habit
  • Simple — no need to calculate interest

Cons:

  • Mathematically you pay more total interest
  • Ignores cost of money

Avalanche Method

You pay off the debt with the highest interest rate first. This approach minimizes total interest cost.

How it works (example):

  1. Pay minimum on all debts
  2. Direct surplus to credit card (21% — highest interest rate)
  3. After paying it off — 200 PLN + surplus goes to personal loan (12%)
  4. And so on

Pros:

  • You save on interest — mathematically optimal
  • Faster reduction of total debt cost

Cons:

  • First debt may take long to pay off — risk of losing motivation
  • Requires discipline

Which Method is Better?

Research shows that the snowball method is more effective in practice, despite being more expensive. Why? Because people more often complete a plan that gives them quick wins. However, if you're disciplined, the avalanche method will save you money.

Step 3: Find Extra Money for Repayment

The more you allocate above minimum, the faster you'll get out of debt:

  • Reduce expenses — review subscriptions, eating out, impulse purchases
  • Increase income — additional contracts, selling unnecessary items
  • Renegotiate terms — call bank and ask for interest rate reduction
  • Consolidation — one loan to pay off everything (watch out for costs!)

Step 4: Automate Payments

Set up automatic transfers for the day after payday. Don't give yourself a chance to spend that money on something else.

Step 5: Build Emergency Fund

Paradoxically, even while paying off debts, it's worth having a small buffer (1,000-3,000 PLN). Without it, every unexpected expense (car breakdown, dentist visit) will set you back to square one.

What to Avoid During Debt Repayment

  1. Don't take new debts — obvious but difficult
  2. Don't close old cards — may lower credit score
  3. Don't ignore minimums — delays damage BIK history
  4. Don't pay at the expense of food — health > debts
  5. Don't be ashamed to ask for help — debt counselors can negotiate with creditors

How Long Will Repayment Take?

It depends on your surplus. Simple formula:

Time ≈ Total debt ÷ Monthly surplus above minimum

For 41,000 PLN debt and 500 PLN surplus — about 82 months (almost 7 years). But every additional 100 PLN shortens this time by several months.

How Freenance Can Help

Freenance allows you to track all obligations in one place. You see total debt balance, monitor repayment progress, and control how your net worth grows with every paid-off PLN. The app helps maintain motivation by showing real progress on the path to debt freedom.

👉 Start controlling your debts with Freenance — freenance.io

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