Debt Payoff Snowball vs. Avalanche: Which Calculator Strategy Saves More?

Hello friend, male or female, of the Indian Republic, caught in a web of
more loans than one has hours to complete a cup of tea? No worries! We’ve
all been there. Whether it is that mid-night sale e-shopping binge or the
farz of impressing the rishta aunties with that new car EMI, loans stack up
like traffic in Mumbai. The good news? This is on ways you can pay them
off much earlier than it takes your local chai wallah to prepare a cutting
chai. Welcome to the Snowball and Avalanche strategies of paying off debt!
Which of these do you think will clear the road quicker so that you don’t
need to be told the outcome by your neighborhood chacha or have to spend
a lot of money?

  1. The Snowball Method: Because Size Doesn’t Matter
    Picture this: It’s like rolling a snowball down a hill. It rolls up from a small
    size, which is okay but gains more snow (and momentum) as it progresses.
    I would like you to imagine your debt as a pile of snow. I am going to
    explain why this is a great analogy. There are good results in the Snowball
    method where people take small starts, clear the smallest bills first and feel
    the satisfaction of clearing every single bill. It’s a bit like when you’re busy
    crossing things to-do list cross of, for instance, checking Instagram and you
    feel so accomplished by the middle of the morning.
    How It Works:
    Make a list of all your debts, regardless of the interest rate. From the
    smallest to the largest. If that credit card loan is slowly sucking your life
    away at 18%, then it starts with the smallest of loans—the ₹ 2000 you
    borrowed from your best friend (interest-free loans are a best friend in this
    grown-up world).
    Aversion should be made towards paying off the smallest balance. Once
    that’s done, go to the next one and include whatever you were paying on the
    first debt to the second.
    Take the shower until you’re living your life free from debts and feeling like
    a dosa minus the potato filling.
    Example:
    You’ve got:
    ₹1,000 due to the bill you both left on the Zomato app last month and how
    you are still owing your friend half the amount still.
    ₹10,000 spent using that credit card EMI for the iPhone 15 you had no
    other option but to buy since ‘no one uses iPhone 14’ anymore.
    ₹50,000 car loan.
    First of all, it is necessary to pay the ₹1,000 credit first. After that, you will
    feel like a star. Now imagine you still have to give that ₹1,000 you were
    paying your friend in addition to your EMI for the iPhone and then chip
    chip chip at the bigger ones.
    Pros:
    Instant gratification! It lets you see the progress early enough and you end
    up feeling that you are in a position to be doing something.
    Motivation boost—Because eliminating that first debt is like getting the
    least desirable seat in the Mumbai local.
    Cons:
    Not always the cheapest. If you are charged a higher interest rate on your
    big loans, then you are advised to pay higher after some time of borrowing.
    But hey, that’s okay; mental peace can often overlook a few logical holes
    one tends to make while deciding not to spend money.
  2. The Avalanche Method: Because Math Aunties Are Always Right
    You understand how your mom always tells you, ‘Beta, invest in FD.’ Safe
    hai.”? That’s her mind doing the adding up of the return on
    investment—spending all the time estimating the costs. If you are a math
    nerd—or you are someone who makes it his/her business to save every
    penny—then the Avalanche might be your chosen method. Here, you make
    payments in order of a debt’s interest rate; you pay the debt with the
    highest interest rate first.
    How It Works:
    Organize all your debts by their respective interest rates, arranged right
    from the highest to the lowest.
    Pay off the interest charges that are relatively high to begin with, and start
    thinking about a long-term credit liberation strategy. For instance, that
    credit card loan at 18% interest deserves to be paid before your SaaS’s
    personal loan you got at a mere 6% (and some emotional blackmail).
    Once the highest interest loan is no longer an option, go down to the next
    best, and so on. From this angle, you might want to regard it as paying up
    your liabilities systematically.
    Example:
    ₹50,000 credit card loan (interest rate: 18%)
    ₹1,00,000 home loan (interest rate: 7%)
    ₹25,000 bike loan (interest rate: 10%)
    Begin with going for that outstand credit card loan like you go for the
    sweets corner in the Indian marriage sweet shop. After the card loan is out
    of the picture, you proceed to the biking loan, and so on.
    Pros:
    Will cost your company the least amount of money in the long run.
    Meaning the more liabilities you pay off early, you save in the long run.
    That is like trying to determine which path to take in getting out of a traffic
    congestion.
    It seems as if you are winning at life and have the extra cash for whatever
    the next shiny thing is you think you may want.
    Cons:
    It just takes longer for anyone to see that they are making progress, and
    there is no immediate burst of good feeling one obtains with the Snowball
    method. It’s like starting a long-distance train journey—though one does
    reach Goa, it has taken ages!
  3. Which One Should You Choose?
    Oh, the daily burning question: isn’t it Snowball or Avalanche? Well, it
    really depends on the person’s personality. If you are someone who wants
    results without having the patience to wait and continues watching a Netflix
    series if it’s slow, the Snowball method is for you. Expect little successes
    that help you stay encouraged; it is as if your crush liked your picture on
    Instagram.
    But if you are like someone who plans, plans long-term, calculates every
    paisa and makes the numbers work for you, the Avalanche method is your
    dhobi wala’s preference—the method gets the costliest things off the deck
    first so the rates don’t keep bleeding you.
  4. Debt Calculators: The New Best Friend (because the Old One
    Wants Money Back)

    That being said, whichever approach you decide to take on, you do not need
    to fake it till you make it on idea juggling. To learn how much you’ll save
    using either option, use an online debt calculator. There are tools aplenty;
    for instance, apps for managing loans on one’s Cred or MoneyView, the tool
    of creating some repayment plan. Because, let’s just be honest, nobody
    wants to sit down and figure out the mess of it with savings.
    Here’s a pro tip: Try both! Enter both sets of numbers into an online
    calculator and then quickly determine which of the two makes you feel
    better about living on this earth. And, of course, the idea is to pay up debts
    before one falls back on a loan once again—this time for your future kids’
    school fees because private schools are not cheap.
    Final Thoughts: Snowball or Avalanche?
    Really, the best approach, irrespective of which one you have opted for, is to
    maintain consistency! Saying this feels like deciding between dal makhani
    and butter chicken—both are great as long as you do not leave the dinner
    half way. Well, there you have it: Get your calculator handy (your phone
    will do as well), choose your favorite debt repayment plan, and annihilate
    those loans!
    Yes, a debt-free life is on the way and let me tell you that zero in your loan
    balance feels better than the extra chutney on your pav bhaji.
    Good luck! May your EMI stress evaporate quicker than you saying, ‘Aaj
    paisa nahi hai bhaiya!

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