How Debt Consolidation Works
Debt consolidation replaces multiple debts with a single loan. Instead of juggling several payments at different rates, you make one payment at (ideally) a lower rate. The potential benefits include:
- Lower interest rate: Replacing high-rate credit cards (15-25%) with a personal loan (6-12%)
- Simpler payments: One due date instead of many
- Fixed payoff date: Installment loans have a set end date, unlike credit card minimums
- Lower monthly payment: Spreading the balance over a longer term (but watch total cost)
When Consolidation Makes Sense
| Good Candidate | Think Twice |
|---|---|
| Multiple high-rate debts (15%+) | Low-rate debts (under 8%) |
| Can qualify for a lower rate | Poor credit = high consolidation rate |
| Committed to not adding new debt | Likely to run up cards again |
| Want a fixed payoff timeline | Close to paying off current debts |
| Debt is manageable (under 40% of income) | Debt is overwhelming (may need counseling) |
Consolidation Methods Compared
| Method | Typical Rate | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal Loan | 6-36% | Fixed rate, fixed term, no collateral | Origination fees, rate depends on credit |
| Balance Transfer Card | 0% promo (12-21 mo) | Interest-free period | 3-5% transfer fee, high rate after promo |
| Home Equity Loan | 5-10% | Low rate, tax-deductible interest | Home is collateral, closing costs |
| 401(k) Loan | Prime + 1% | No credit check, pay yourself interest | Reduces retirement savings, repay if you leave job |
Key Factors to Consider
- Total cost, not just monthly payment: A lower payment over a longer term can cost more total. Always compare total payments.
- Origination fees: Fees of 1-8% are added to your loan balance. A $25,000 loan with 3% fee means you owe $25,750.
- Prepayment penalties: Some loans charge for early payoff — check before signing.
- Credit impact: Applying for a loan triggers a hard inquiry. Opening a new account may temporarily lower your score, but paying down credit cards improves utilization.
- Behavioral risk: Consolidation frees up credit card limits. If you run up new balances, you end up worse off.
Steps to Consolidate Debt
- List all debts: Balance, rate, minimum payment for each
- Check your credit: Your score determines the rate you qualify for
- Compare offers: Get quotes from banks, credit unions, and online lenders
- Calculate total cost: Use the calculator above to compare scenarios
- Read the fine print: Check for fees, penalties, and variable rate terms
- Apply and pay off debts: Use the loan proceeds to pay existing debts immediately
- Close or freeze cards: Avoid accumulating new debt on freed-up credit lines