Debt Avalanche Method — Pay off your highest-interest debt first. Mathematically optimal. Saves the most money. Requires patience and discipline.

Debt Avalanche Method for Canadians 2025

The debt avalanche method is the mathematically optimal strategy for eliminating debt. Instead of targeting the smallest balance (like the snowball method), you target the highest interest rate first. This minimizes the total amount of interest you pay over the life of your debt repayment — often saving hundreds or thousands of dollars compared to other approaches.

The avalanche requires patience. If your highest-rate debt is also your largest balance, you might not eliminate any account for months. For Canadians who can stay disciplined without quick wins, the avalanche is the superior choice.

How the Debt Avalanche Works: Step by Step

  1. List all debts by interest rate, highest to lowest.
  2. Pay minimums on every debt except the highest-rate one.
  3. Put every extra dollar toward the highest-rate debt.
  4. When that debt is paid off, roll its payment to the next-highest-rate debt.
  5. Repeat until debt-free.

Example: Avalanche vs. Snowball Savings

Michael has three debts: $6,000 credit card at 22.99%, $3,500 personal loan at 14%, and $2,000 line of credit at 9%. He has $400/month extra after minimums.

Avalanche order: Credit card → personal loan → line of credit
Estimated total interest: ~$2,100 over 26 months

Snowball order: Line of credit → personal loan → credit card
Estimated total interest: ~$2,800 over 27 months

The avalanche saves Michael approximately $700 in interest and gets him debt-free one month sooner.

Why the Avalanche Saves More Money

Interest compounds daily on most Canadian credit products. Every dollar of principal you reduce on a high-rate debt immediately stops generating that expensive interest. When you put money toward a 22.99% credit card instead of a 9% line of credit, you're essentially earning a 14% better return on that dollar.

Over months and years of repayment, this compounding effect adds up. The higher your interest rates, the greater the savings from using the avalanche method.

Typical Canadian Debt Interest Rates (2025)

Debt TypeTypical RateAvalanche Priority
Payday loan390%+ APRFirst (always)
Store credit card29.99%Very high
Standard credit card19.99%–22.99%High
Unsecured personal loan12%–20%Medium-high
Car loan5%–12%Medium
HELOCPrime + 0.5%–2%Low
Mortgage4%–6%Lowest

Avalanche in the Canadian Context

For Canadians specifically, a few situations affect how you apply the avalanche:

Staying Motivated with the Avalanche

The hardest part of the avalanche is the patience it requires. If your highest-rate debt is also large, it may take a year or more before you eliminate any account. Strategies to stay on track:

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Free Tools to Plan Your Avalanche

Several free tools help Canadian debt-payers model their avalanche: