If you’re serious about paying off debt, you need a strategy. Two methods dominate: the debt snowball and the debt avalanche. Both work — but choosing the right one for your personality could save you thousands and get you debt-free years earlier.

What Is the Debt Snowball?

Popularised by Dave Ramsey, the debt snowball works by targeting your smallest balance first, regardless of interest rate:

  1. List debts from smallest to largest balance
  2. Pay minimums on all except the smallest
  3. Throw every extra pound at the smallest debt
  4. When paid off, roll that payment into the next smallest
  5. Repeat until debt-free

What Is the Debt Avalanche?

The mathematically optimal approach — attack your highest interest rate first:

  1. List debts from highest to lowest interest rate
  2. Pay minimums on all except the highest-rate debt
  3. Throw every extra pound at the highest-rate debt
  4. When paid off, roll into the next highest rate
  5. Repeat

Which Is Better?

The Avalanche wins mathematically

Attacking highest interest first always minimises total interest paid and gets you debt-free fastest — in pure numbers terms. The difference can be £500–£2,000+ depending on your debt levels.

The Snowball wins psychologically

Research from Harvard Business Review found snowball users are more likely to stick with their plan. Quick wins — eliminating small debts early — trigger a motivational response that keeps people going. The best strategy is the one you’ll actually follow.

Who Should Use Which?

Choose Snowball if: You’ve struggled to stay motivated with debt payoff before, need quick wins, or your debts have similar interest rates anyway.

Choose Avalanche if: You’re disciplined, data-driven, and have high-interest debt (20%+ APR) costing you significant money.

Tips to Accelerate Either Method

  • Balance transfers: Move high-interest credit card debt to a 0% card
  • Automate minimums: Never miss a payment
  • Apply windfalls: Put tax refunds, bonuses, and side hustle income straight to debt
  • Cut new debt: Freeze credit cards during repayment

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I combine both methods?

Yes — start with the snowball for a quick win, then switch to the avalanche. Many people find this hybrid gives the best of both worlds.

Should I pay debt or invest?

If your debt rate is above 7–8%, prioritise payoff. Below that, investing in a diversified index fund (historically 7–10% annual return) may be the better mathematical choice.

More help: How to Pay Off Debt Fast | Improve Your Credit Score

Disclaimer: The content on SavvyQuid is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always consult a qualified financial adviser before making any financial decisions.