Debt Snowball vs Avalanche Calculator Canada
Compare payoff time and interest between snowball and avalanche debt repayment strategies.
Last updated: May 2026
Payoff schedule
| Month | Snowball remaining | Avalanche remaining |
|---|
What is the debt snowball method?
Snowball targets the smallest balance first while paying minimums on all other debts.
What is the debt avalanche method?
Avalanche targets the highest-interest debt first while paying minimums on the rest.
Snowball vs avalanche: which is better?
Avalanche often saves more interest, while snowball may provide faster motivational wins.
Why minimum payments matter
Minimums keep accounts current but may not reduce principal quickly if rates are high.
How extra payments speed up debt payoff
Extra principal payments reduce outstanding balances and future interest costs.
When to ask for help with debt
If balances keep growing or payments are unmanageable, consider qualified debt support options.
FAQ
Is this exact?
No. This calculator uses simplified monthly assumptions for educational planning.
What if I only pay minimums?
Payoff can take much longer and total interest may be significantly higher.
Why do results cap at 600 months?
The projection window is capped to prevent unrealistic infinite timelines.
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only and is not financial, credit, debt, legal, insolvency, or bankruptcy advice. Results are estimates and may not reflect your personal situation.
Trust, assumptions, and maintenance
Last updated: May 2026
Calculator Accuracy
Methodology summary
This calculator provides a simplified estimate based on your inputs and educational assumptions for planning scenarios.
Accuracy notes
Results are estimates. Actual outcomes can vary based on full tax rules, lender terms, benefit formulas, timing, and personal circumstances.
Assumptions
- Calculations are simplified and educational.
- Results depend on your inputs and scenario choices.
- Tax, benefit, mortgage, and government rules can change over time.
- Users should verify important decisions with official sources or qualified professionals.
When to verify with an official source or professional
Verify before filing taxes, signing mortgages or loans, drawing retirement income, making contribution decisions, or relying on benefits calculations.
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only and is not financial, tax, legal, accounting, mortgage, debt, retirement, investment, or government benefits advice.
Found a mistake or outdated assumption? Contact us so we can review it.