This is one of the most common money questions young Canadians ask, and the honest answer is: it depends on the interest rate. Not on your feelings about debt. Not on what your parents think. On the interest rate.
Here's a framework for making this decision rationally, with specific guidance for the types of debt most young Canadians carry.
Every debt has a cost: its interest rate. Every investment has an expected return. The decision is essentially: does my expected investment return exceed my debt's cost?
Some people argue you should pay down all debt before building savings. This is wrong for a simple reason: without a cash buffer, any unexpected expense goes onto a credit card at 19.99%. You're paying down debt only to immediately re-accumulate it.
Build your emergency fund first — in a high-interest savings account TFSA so it earns something while it sits — before aggressively attacking debt below 10%.
Investing beats debt payoff when:
There's a real psychological argument for paying down debt aggressively even when the math doesn't strictly demand it. Being debt-free feels good. It reduces financial anxiety. It improves sleep. It makes you more financially resilient to job loss or income disruption.
The Dave Ramsey "debt snowball" approach — paying off smallest balances first regardless of interest rate — is mathematically suboptimal but psychologically effective for many people. If you're the type who needs wins to stay motivated, the snowball's momentum can be worth the math cost.
Personal finance is personal. A plan you'll stick to beats an optimal plan you'll abandon.
For medium-rate debt (3-7%), many Canadians do both simultaneously:
This approach builds investment wealth while making progress on debt, without forcing an all-or-nothing choice. It's not mathematically perfect but it's practical and sustainable.
Seeing markets go up while you're sitting with cash paying off debt can feel agonizing. Resist the urge to invest in speculative assets (individual stocks, crypto, options) with money that should be going toward high-interest debt. The expected return of those investments doesn't justify the guaranteed 20% cost of leaving credit card debt unpaid.
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