Managing Debt UK 2026 — Repayment Strategies, APR and Getting Out of Debt

Debt Repayment Schedule Calculator UK — Avalanche vs Snowball Method

Calculate how long it will take to clear your debts and how much interest you will pay. Compare the avalanche and snowball methods and build a step-by-step repayment schedule.

If you're struggling with debt, free confidential help is available from StepChange (0800 138 1111), National Debtline (0808 808 4000), and Citizens Advice.

If you have multiple debts — credit cards, personal loans, overdraft, buy-now-pay-later — a debt repayment schedule turns an overwhelming situation into a clear, manageable plan. This guide explains how to calculate your debt-free date and compare the avalanche and snowball methods.

For more on managing debt and understanding your options, see the Credit and Debt Hub.

The two main debt repayment methods

Method Order of repayment Best for
Avalanche Highest interest rate first Minimising total interest paid
Snowball Smallest balance first Staying motivated with quick wins

Both methods use the roll-up principle: once one debt is cleared, the monthly payment previously sent to that debt is redirected to the next one. This accelerates repayment progressively.

How to build your debt repayment schedule

Step 1: List all your debts

Debt Balance APR Minimum payment
Credit card A £3,200 29.9% £64
Credit card B £1,500 22.9% £30
Personal loan £8,000 8.9% £165
Overdraft £500 39.9% n/a

Total debt: £13,200 | Total minimums: £259/month

Step 2: Determine available monthly payment

Budget analysis: total monthly payment available = £500/month (£241 above minimums).

Step 3a: Avalanche order

Ranked by APR (highest first):

  1. Overdraft: 39.9% APR
  2. Credit card A: 29.9% APR
  3. Credit card B: 22.9% APR
  4. Personal loan: 8.9% APR

Month-by-month plan (avalanche):

Month Focus debt Extra payment Balance falling
1–2 Overdraft (£500) £241 Cleared in ~2 months
3–20 Credit card A (£3,200) £241 + £500 freed = £741 extra Cleared in ~18 months
21–26 Credit card B (£1,500) £741 + £64 freed = £805 extra Cleared in ~5 months
27–48 Personal loan (£8,000) £805 + £30 freed = £835 extra Cleared in ~22 months

Estimated debt-free date: ~48 months (4 years) Estimated total interest paid: ~£4,200

Step 3b: Snowball order

Ranked by balance (smallest first):

  1. Overdraft: £500
  2. Credit card B: £1,500
  3. Credit card A: £3,200
  4. Personal loan: £8,000

Results (snowball, same £500/month total):

Estimated debt-free date: ~50 months (4 years 2 months) Estimated total interest paid: ~£4,800

Difference: Snowball costs approximately £600 more in interest and takes 2 months longer. The benefit is clearing two small debts in the first 6 months (psychological wins).

The monthly interest calculation

To estimate interest accruing on a balance each month:

Monthly interest = Balance × (APR ÷ 100 ÷ 12)

Balance APR Monthly interest
£3,200 29.9% £79.73
£1,500 22.9% £28.63
£8,000 8.9% £59.33
£500 39.9% £16.63

This shows that minimum payments on the credit cards barely cover interest — the ‘minimum payment trap’.

The minimum payment trap

On a £3,200 credit card at 29.9% APR, the minimum payment of £64/month covers only the interest (£79.73) — meaning the balance is actually growing, not falling. You need to pay at least above the monthly interest for the balance to reduce.

Rule of thumb: your payment must exceed (balance × APR ÷ 1200) to make any progress at all.

0% balance transfer: the debt avalanche supercharger

If you are eligible for a 0% balance transfer credit card, this is often the most powerful move before starting the avalanche:

  1. Transfer highest-rate balances to 0% card (typically 12–30 months)
  2. Pay off the transferred balance in full before the 0% period ends
  3. Every payment reduces the balance rather than servicing interest

Eligibility factors for 0% transfer cards:

  • Credit score (fair to excellent typically required)
  • Existing debt level
  • No history of defaults or CCJs in the past 6 years

Transfer fees are typically 2–3% of the balance transferred. Even so, this is almost always worthwhile compared to 29.9% APR.

When to get free debt advice

If your minimum payments exceed 50% of your disposable income, or if you cannot meet minimums, professional debt advice is the right next step. Free services in the UK:

  • StepChange — stepchange.org (debt management plans, IVAs)
  • National Debtline — nationaldebtline.org
  • Citizens Advice — citizensadvice.org.uk
  • Money Helper — moneyhelper.org.uk

These services are free, impartial, and confidential. They can negotiate with creditors, arrange debt management plans, or advise on formal solutions (IVAs, bankruptcy).

Sources

  1. StepChange — Debt Calculator
  2. Money Helper — Debt Help and Advice
  3. Citizens Advice — Options for paying off debt