Debt Payoff Calculator

Quick Answer: Enter your debt balance, APR, and desired payoff timeline to see exactly what monthly payment you need to become debt-free on schedule.
Required Monthly Payment
Total Amount Paid
Total Interest Paid
Interest as % of Debt
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How This Debt Payoff Calculator Works

This calculator uses your total debt balance, interest rate, and desired payoff timeline to calculate the exact monthly payment needed to become debt-free on schedule.

  1. Enter your total debt balance in dollars.
  2. Enter your Annual Percentage Rate (APR).
  3. Enter how many months you want to take to pay off the debt.
  4. Click “Calculate Payoff Plan” to see your required monthly payment.

Use this calculator to compare different payoff timelines and find the monthly payment that fits your budget.

All calculations use standard amortization formulas. See our Methodology page for the exact formulas used.

Example Calculation

Here’s an example of how much you’d need to pay to eliminate $10,000 in credit card debt:

Scenario: $10,000 balance at 22% APR

Balance$10,000
APR22%
Payoff in 24 months$511/month — $2,264 interest
Payoff in 36 months$381/month — $3,716 interest
Payoff in 48 months$321/month — $5,408 interest

Notice how a longer payoff timeline means more interest paid. Paying off debt in 24 months instead of 48 saves over $3,000 in interest charges.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How do I calculate my debt payoff date?
To calculate your payoff date, you need your current balance, interest rate, and monthly payment. This calculator does that math for you — just enter your desired payoff timeline and it shows the required monthly payment.
What is the fastest way to pay off debt?
The fastest strategies are the debt avalanche (paying off highest-interest debt first) and debt snowball (paying off smallest balances first). Both methods work — the key is paying more than the minimum each month.
Should I pay off debt or save money?
If your debt interest rate is higher than your savings rate (usually the case with credit cards), paying off debt first gives you a better return. A common approach is to keep a small emergency fund while aggressively paying down high-interest debt.
How much does paying extra reduce my payoff time?
Even small additional payments make a big difference. On a $10,000 balance at 22% APR, paying an extra $50/month can reduce your payoff time by 6+ months and save hundreds in interest.
What is a good monthly payment for credit card debt?
A good rule of thumb is to pay at least 2–3x the minimum payment. For most people, aiming to pay off credit card debt within 12–24 months is a realistic and financially smart goal.

Related Debt Calculators

Explore our other free tools to take full control of your finances:

How This Calculator Works

This calculator determines how long it will take to pay off a debt based on your balance, interest rate, and fixed monthly payment. It uses month-by-month amortization: each month, interest is calculated on the remaining balance, your payment is applied, and the new balance is carried forward until it reaches zero. The calculator also shows your exact payoff date and the total amount of interest you will pay over the life of the debt.

You can adjust the monthly payment field to instantly see how different payment amounts change your payoff timeline and total interest cost. This makes it easy to find a payment level that fits your budget while still making meaningful progress.

When Should You Use This Tool

Use this calculator when you want a clear payoff target. Knowing your exact payoff date — not just a vague estimate — makes it easier to stay on track. It also helps when you are deciding how much extra to put toward debt each month. Seeing the numbers side by side (for example, paying off in 3 years vs. 5 years) makes the trade-off concrete rather than abstract.

This tool is especially useful if you are following the debt avalanche or debt snowball method and want to calculate a payoff timeline for each card individually before deciding where to focus your extra payments.

Example Calculation

Assume you have a $6,000 balance at 19% APR. If you pay $150 per month, the monthly interest charge starts at about $95 — meaning only $55 goes toward principal in the first month. At this pace, payoff takes approximately 65 months and costs around $3,700 in total interest.

Increasing the monthly payment to $250 reduces payoff to about 32 months and cuts total interest to roughly $1,900. The same $6,000 balance costs nearly $1,800 less in interest simply by paying $100 more per month.