When you have credit card debt and limited money, deciding whether to pay it off or save creates real stress. Here’s the clear answer based on the numbers.
The Simple Maths
| Action | Typical rate | Return on £1,000 |
|---|---|---|
| Pay off credit card | 22-35% APR | Save £220-£350/year in interest |
| Pay off store card | 25-40% APR | Save £250-£400/year in interest |
| Put in savings account | 4-5% AER | Earn £40-£50/year in interest |
| Put in Cash ISA | 4-5% AER | Earn £40-£50/year tax-free |
| Invest in stocks | ~7% average | Earn ~£70/year (not guaranteed) |
Paying off a credit card at 25% gives you a guaranteed 25% return. No savings account or investment can match that.
The Right Order
Step 1. Build a Basic Emergency Buffer (£500-£1,000)
Before aggressively paying down debt, keep a small buffer. Without it, any unexpected cost (car repair, boiler breakdown, emergency travel) goes straight back on the credit card.
| Situation | Emergency buffer target |
|---|---|
| Single, renting | £500 |
| Homeowner | £1,000 |
| Family with children | £1,000 |
| Self-employed | £1,000-£2,000 |
Step 2. Clear High-Interest Debt
Focus all spare money on clearing the most expensive debt first:
| Debt type | Typical APR | Priority |
|---|---|---|
| Store cards | 25-40% | Highest |
| Credit cards | 20-35% | High |
| Unauthorised overdraft | 35-40% | High (if applicable) |
| Arranged overdraft | 15-40% | Medium-high |
| Catalogue debt | 25-45% | High |
| Personal loans | 5-15% | Medium |
| Car finance (PCP/HP) | 5-12% | Medium |
Step 3. Build a Proper Emergency Fund
Once high-interest debt is cleared:
| Target | How much |
|---|---|
| Minimum | 1 month’s essential expenses |
| Comfortable | 3 months’ essential expenses |
| Secure | 6 months’ essential expenses |
Step 4. Start Investing and Saving for Goals
With no expensive debt and a solid emergency fund, you’re ready to build wealth.
When Saving Alongside Debt Makes Sense
There are some exceptions where you shouldn’t throw everything at debt:
| Exception | Why |
|---|---|
| Employer pension match | Free money — contribute enough to get the full match |
| 0% credit card (balance transfer) | No interest cost — save in a high-interest account instead |
| Upcoming essential expense | If you know a large bill is coming, save for it |
| Very low-interest debt | Mortgage or student loan — invest if returns exceed the rate |
The 0% Balance Transfer Strategy
If you can transfer credit card debt to a 0% deal:
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 1 | Transfer balance to 0% card (fee: typically 2-3%) |
| 2 | Set up direct debit for minimum payment |
| 3 | Divide remaining balance by months of 0% |
| 4 | Pay that amount monthly to clear before 0% ends |
| 5 | Save any extra in a high-interest account |
Real-World Example
Sarah has £3,000 credit card debt (25% APR) and £2,000 savings (4% AER):
| Option A: Keep savings | Option B: Pay off debt |
|---|---|
| Savings earn: £80/year | Credit card costs saved: £750/year |
| Credit card costs: £750/year | Savings earn: £0 |
| Net cost: -£670/year | Net cost: £0 |
| Plus still owes £3,000 | Debt-free, rebuild savings |
Option B saves Sarah £670 per year and eliminates the stress of debt.
If Sarah keeps £500 as emergency buffer and uses £1,500 to reduce the debt:
| Result | Detail |
|---|---|
| Remaining debt | £1,500 (down from £3,000) |
| Emergency buffer | £500 (peace of mind) |
| Interest saved | £375/year |
| Debt cleared faster | Months vs years |
The Debt Avalanche vs Debt Snowball
| Method | How it works | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Avalanche | Pay highest-interest debt first | Saves the most money |
| Snowball | Pay smallest debt first | Quick wins for motivation |
Both work. The avalanche method saves more in interest, but the snowball method can help if you need psychological wins to stay motivated.
Checklist
- Do you have at least £500 saved? → If no, save that first
- Do you have debt above 10% APR? → Pay it off before saving more
- Can you transfer to a 0% card? → Do it, then save alongside
- Is your employer matching pension contributions? → Contribute enough to get the match
- Is all expensive debt cleared? → Build your emergency fund to 3-6 months
Related Guides
- Debt Consolidation Guide — combining debts
- How to Improve Your Credit Score — rebuilding after debt
- Best Savings Accounts UK — where to save
- Balance Transfer Credit Cards — shift debt to 0%