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Should You Pay Off Debt or Save Money First?
When you have extra money, the instinct pulls two ways: wipe out debt, or build savings? The good news is there's a sensible order most financial pros agree on — and it isn't strictly one or the other.
→ See what an extra $100 does against your debt — free calculatorThe quick answer
Build a small starter emergency fund first (around $1,000, or one month of essentials), then attack high-interest debt aggressively, and only after that grow bigger savings and investments. The small fund keeps a surprise expense from sending you straight back to the credit card.
The math: interest rate vs. return
Paying off debt gives you a guaranteed, risk-free return equal to the interest rate. Clearing a 22% credit card is like earning a guaranteed 22% — something no savings account or investment can promise. So when your debt rate is high, paying it off almost always beats saving more.
| Your debt's APR | Smarter move |
|---|---|
| High (cards, ~15%+) | Pay off the debt first |
| Medium (~6–15%) | Split — pay debt, save a bit |
| Low (~<6%, some loans) | Save/invest while paying minimums |
The order most experts suggest
- Tiny emergency fund — ~$1,000 so a flat tire doesn't become new debt.
- Employer 401(k) match — if offered, contribute enough to get it. It's an instant 50–100% return you shouldn't skip even while in debt.
- High-interest debt — credit cards and anything above ~8–10%, attacked hard.
- Full emergency fund — build to 3–6 months of expenses.
- Low-rate debt + investing — pay these on schedule while growing wealth.
Exceptions worth knowing
- No safety net at all? Prioritize that first $1,000 even over extra debt payments.
- Free employer match? Never leave it on the table — it beats almost any debt payoff.
- Very low-rate debt? A 3% loan is cheap; saving and investing can reasonably come first.
What about investing while in debt?
The same logic applies: compare your debt's guaranteed "return" to what investing might earn. Paying off a 22% credit card is a guaranteed 22% — better than the stock market's long-run average, so high-rate debt wins. The one big exception is an employer 401(k) match: contributing enough to capture a 50–100% match is free money that beats almost any debt payoff, so grab it even while paying down cards. For low-rate debt (a 3–4% loan), investing or saving alongside minimum payments is reasonable, since your money can likely earn more than the loan costs. The higher your rate, the more debt payoff wins.
The bottom line
It's not all-or-nothing. Secure a small cushion, grab any free match, then crush high-interest debt before turning fully to savings. That sequence protects you today and saves the most money over time.
→ Make your payoff plan now (free, private)Related: Make a payoff plan · Which debt first? · Pay off debt on low income