How to pay off credit card debt in 5 steps.
Last verified July 7, 2026The direct answer. Write down every card's balance, APR, and minimum, because the full list is the plan's foundation and most people have never totaled it. Freeze the debt where it stands by moving daily spending to debit. Then pick your order: avalanche pays the highest APR first and saves the most interest; snowball pays the smallest balance first and pays you in momentum. Fix a monthly attack number beyond the minimums, automate it at one target card, and roll each finished card's payment into the next. Transfers and consolidation loans lower the interest while the plan does the work.
Build the complete list.
Every card, its balance, APR, minimum payment, and statement date, in one table. Sum the balances and the minimums. The number is usually uncomfortable and always useful; a debt you can see is a debt you can schedule. This list also feeds every later decision, from payoff order to transfer candidates.
Stop the balances from growing.
Move daily spending to debit or cash while the payoff runs, and leave the cards home. Trim or pause subscriptions riding on the cards. The plan needs the balances standing still to work. Keep the cards open, since closures raise utilization and lower your score while you are fixing it.
Choose avalanche or snowball and commit.
Avalanche orders cards by APR, highest first, and minimizes total interest, the mathematically strongest path. Snowball orders by balance, smallest first, and delivers a first victory in weeks, which research on debt behavior shows keeps more people on plan. Both work. Pick the one that matches your temperament and stay with it to the end.
Fix the attack number and automate it.
Set a specific monthly amount beyond all the minimums, even $200, and autopay it at the target card the day after payday. When the target card hits zero, roll its entire payment into the next card, so the attack grows as the list shrinks. Windfalls, refunds, and raises join the attack by standing rule.
Cut the interest rate on the stubborn middle.
With the plan running, move the highest-APR balance to a 0 percent transfer card for the standard 3 to 5 percent fee, or wrap several balances into a fixed-rate consolidation loan with one payment and an end date. Either can turn a 24 percent problem into a single-digit one. Also worth one call each: your issuers, asking for a rate reduction, which succeeds more often than people expect.
Five things to do this week.
- Build the table: every balance, APR, minimum, and statement date.
- Switch daily spending to debit today.
- Pick avalanche or snowball and order the list.
- Set the attack-number autopay at the first target card.
- Prequalify for one transfer card or consolidation loan and run the fee math.
Questions readers ask most often.
Avalanche or snowball: which is better?
Avalanche saves more interest; snowball keeps more people going. On a $15,000 spread the difference is typically a few hundred dollars, and an abandoned plan costs far more than either method's gap. The plan you finish is the better plan.
Should I pay off cards or save first?
Hold $1,000 as a starter emergency buffer, then send everything spare at the cards. Card APRs above 20 percent beat any guaranteed return savings can earn, and the buffer keeps the next surprise off the cards while you work.
Will paying off my cards raise my credit score?
Meaningfully. Utilization is 30 percent of a FICO score and reprices as soon as lower balances report, with no memory of past levels. Dropping from 60 percent to under 10 percent utilization commonly moves a score 40 points or more within two cycles.
Should I use my 401(k) or home equity to clear cards?
Both convert an unsecured debt into a threat against retirement or the house, and the 401(k) route adds taxes and penalties on early withdrawal. The transfer, the consolidation loan, and the attack plan reach the same finish line with none of that downside.
What about debt settlement companies?
Settlement firms have you stop paying while fees accrue and your credit absorbs the damage, and forgiven balances can be taxable. Nonprofit credit counseling agencies offer debt management plans with reduced rates for a small fee, a far safer version of the same relief.
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Source: True North by Competitive Compass. "How to Pay Off Credit Card Debt in 5 Steps". Published 2026-07-07.
URL: https://competitive-compass.com/true-north/how-to-pay-off-credit-card-debt-in-5-steps.html