Calculadora del Método Avalancha de Deudas

Paga tus deudas más rápido atacando primero la tasa de interés más alta. Ve tu ahorro total y cronograma de pago.

Tus Deudas

Pago Avalancha

28 meses

Deuda Total

9000 €

Interés Total

1637 €

Total Pagado

10.637 €

Tiempo de Pago

28 meses

Desglose de Deudas

Cronograma de Pago

Cronograma de Pago

MesPagoCapitalInterésSaldo
1455 €324 €131 €8676 €
2455 €330 €125 €8346 €
3455 €336 €119 €8009 €
4455 €342 €113 €7667 €
5455 €349 €106 €7318 €
6425 €325 €100 €6994 €
7425 €329 €96 €6664 €
8425 €334 €91 €6330 €
9425 €339 €86 €5991 €
10425 €344 €81 €5646 €
11425 €350 €75 €5297 €
12425 €355 €70 €4942 €
18425 €388 €37 €2698 €
24275 €263 €12 €867 €
2862 €61 €1 €0 €

Entendiendo el Método Avalancha de Deudas

What Is the Debt Avalanche Method?

The debt avalanche method is a debt repayment strategy where you pay off debts in order of highest to lowest interest rate. You make minimum payments on all debts, then put any extra money toward the debt with the highest interest rate. Once that debt is paid off, you redirect the extra payment to the next-highest-rate debt.

Why the Avalanche Method Works

Mathematically, the avalanche method minimizes the total interest you pay over the life of your debts. By attacking the highest-rate debt first, you reduce the compounding effect of high-interest charges. For someone with a ,000 credit card at 24% APR and a 0,000 personal loan at 8% APR, prioritizing the credit card can save hundreds or even thousands of dollars in interest compared to other approaches.

Avalanche vs. Snowball Method

The debt snowball method, popularized by financial educator Dave Ramsey, focuses on paying off the smallest balance first regardless of interest rate. While the snowball method provides psychological wins through quick victories, the avalanche method is mathematically superior for minimizing total cost. Research from the Journal of Consumer Research suggests that the avalanche method leads to better long-term outcomes for disciplined individuals [1].

How to Use This Calculator

Enter each of your debts including the balance, interest rate, and minimum monthly payment. Then add your extra monthly payment — the amount above all minimums that you can afford. The calculator will simulate the avalanche payoff, showing you the total interest saved, payoff timeline, and a month-by-month breakdown. Use the CSV export to track your progress in a spreadsheet.

Keys to Success with the Avalanche Method

Consistency is critical. Every dollar above your minimum payments should go toward your target debt. Avoid taking on new debt while in repayment. Consider automating your payments to ensure you never miss a minimum. If you receive windfalls like tax refunds or bonuses, apply them to your target debt for maximum impact. The Federal Reserve reports that the average American household carries over ,000 in credit card debt — the avalanche method can cut years off repayment [2].

Ejemplo Práctico: Pago con Avalancha

Step-by-Step Scenario

Consider Sarah, who has three debts:

  • Credit Card A: ,000 at 24.9% APR, minimum payment 50/month
  • Personal Loan: ,000 at 12.5% APR, minimum payment 5/month
  • Credit Card B: ,000 at 18.9% APR, minimum payment 0/month

Sarah can afford an extra 00/month above her minimums. Using the avalanche method, she targets Credit Card A first (24.9% — highest rate).

Months 1-15: Sarah pays minimums on all debts (55 total) plus puts her extra 00 toward Credit Card A. After 15 months, Credit Card A is paid off.

Months 16-20: She redirects the 50 (50 minimum + 00 extra) to Credit Card B. After 5 more months, Credit Card B is gone.

Months 21-28: All 85 (55 minimums + 00 extra - 0 paid off) goes to the Personal Loan, finishing it in about 8 more months.

Result: Total payoff in approximately 28 months with significant interest savings compared to making only minimum payments, which would take over 15 years.

Preguntas Frecuentes

¿Qué es el método avalancha de deudas?

Es una estrategia donde pagas el mínimo en todas las deudas y diriges el dinero extra a la deuda con la tasa de interés más alta.

¿En qué se diferencia del método bola de nieve?

El método avalancha ataca la tasa más alta para minimizar el interés total, mientras el bola de nieve ataca el saldo más pequeño para motivación.

¿Cuánto extra debo pagar?

Tanto como tu presupuesto permita. Incluso $50-100 extra al mes pueden reducir significativamente el tiempo de pago.

¿Funciona con todos los tipos de deuda?

Sí, funciona con tarjetas de crédito, préstamos personales, préstamos estudiantiles y cualquier deuda con interés.

¿Qué pasa si cambian mis tasas de interés?

Actualiza las tasas en la calculadora. Siempre debes atacar la deuda con la tasa más alta actual.

Disclaimer: Esta calculadora proporciona estimaciones con fines informativos. Los tiempos reales pueden variar. Consulta a un asesor financiero.

Fuentes y Referencias

  1. Federal Reserve. "Consumer Credit - G.19." federalreserve.gov
  2. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. "Pay down debt." consumerfinance.gov
  3. Wikipedia. "Debt-snowball method." en.wikipedia.org

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