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How to Make a Debt Payoff Plan, Step by Step
Getting out of debt feels overwhelming until it becomes a plan. A good plan is just five steps: know what you owe, find extra money, choose a method, automate it, and track progress. Here's how to build one this afternoon.
→ Let the calculator build your plan automaticallyStep 1: List every debt
Write down each debt with its balance, minimum payment, and APR. Don't skip the small ones — you need the full picture. Seeing it all in one place is uncomfortable but clarifying; you can't make a plan for numbers you're avoiding.
Step 2: Find extra money to throw at it
Every plan needs fuel: dollars above your minimums. Look in two directions:
- Trim spending. Cancel unused subscriptions, pause dining out, renegotiate insurance and phone bills. Even $100–200/month dramatically shortens your timeline.
- Add income. A side gig, selling unused items, or overtime — temporarily — can become your entire extra payment.
Step 3: Pick a payoff method
Two proven approaches, both of which pay minimums on everything and pour the extra into one target debt:
- Avalanche — attack the highest APR first. Saves the most money.
- Snowball — attack the smallest balance first. Gives quick wins and momentum.
Not sure which? Our full guide on snowball vs. avalanche walks through both, and which debt to pay off first covers the edge cases.
Step 4: Automate the plan
Set up automatic minimum payments on every account so you never miss one, then schedule your extra payment to the target debt right after payday. Automating removes willpower from the equation — the plan runs whether or not you feel motivated that week.
Step 5: Track progress and adjust
Check in monthly. As each debt disappears, roll its freed-up payment onto the next one — this "rollover" is what accelerates everything. When your income or expenses change, update the extra-payment amount and keep going.
Common mistakes that derail a plan
- No emergency buffer. Without even a small cushion, the first surprise expense goes on a card and your plan stalls. Keep ~$1,000 aside before going all-in.
- Dropping your payment as the balance falls. Minimums shrink with the balance — your payment shouldn't. Hold it fixed and you finish far sooner.
- Switching methods constantly. Snowball or avalanche both work; flip-flopping wastes momentum. Pick one and commit.
- Not celebrating wins. Each cleared debt is real progress. Marking it keeps you motivated for the long haul.
The bottom line
A debt payoff plan isn't complicated — it's a list, a number, a method, and a habit. Set it up once, automate it, and let the rollover effect do the heavy lifting.
→ Build your step-by-step plan now (free, private)Related: Snowball vs. avalanche · Pay off debt or save? · Pay off $10,000 in card debt