Debt Snowball Method

Plain-English definition of Debt Snowball Method — part of our borrowing glossary.

By · Updated · Methodology

Definition

A debt payoff strategy where minimum payments are made on all debts, and every spare pound is directed at the smallest balance first. Slightly more expensive overall, but psychologically powerful because you clear individual debts faster.

Worked example

With the same three debts, snowball clears the £1,000 overdraft first (quickest win), then the £3,000 card, then the £5,000 loan. Total interest is slightly higher than avalanche but the behavioural momentum of clearing a debt every few months keeps many people on track.

Why it matters

Borrowing costs compound fast. A few percentage points of APR, or a few months of faster payoff, can change the total cost of a debt by thousands of pounds over its lifetime. Understanding the mechanics before you sign lets you choose the cheapest credible option rather than whatever is advertised first.

Common mistake

The most common mistake is comparing monthly payments instead of total cost. A lower monthly payment usually means a longer term and more total interest. Always compare the total amount paid over the full term, not just the headline monthly figure.

Calculators that use this concept

Go deeper

→ Explore Debt Snowball Method in context

See also

  • APR (Annual Percentage Rate) — APR is the yearly cost of borrowing, expressed as a percentage of the amount borrowed, including most fees. A …
  • Debt Avalanche Method — A debt payoff strategy where minimum payments are made on all debts, and every spare pound is directed at the …
  • Balance Transfer — Moving a credit card balance to a new card — typically with a promotional 0% APR window of 12–30 months and a …
  • AER (Annual Equivalent Rate) — AER is the savings equivalent of APR — the rate of interest you earn on a savings account assuming interest is…
  • SDLT (Stamp Duty Land Tax) — Stamp Duty Land Tax is the UK tax on residential and commercial property purchases in England and Northern Ire…

Browse the glossary

→ All glossary terms