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Debt Snowball vs Debt Avalanche: Which Payoff Strategy Works in Malaysia? Debt Management

Debt Snowball vs Debt Avalanche: Which Payoff Strategy Works in Malaysia?

Two proven debt payoff methods explained with Malaysian ringgit examples — plus when consolidation beats both.

5 min read April 03, 2026

When you're ready to get serious about paying off debt, two strategies dominate the conversation: the Debt Snowball and the Debt Avalanche. Both work, but they suit different personalities and financial situations. Let's break them down with Malaysian examples.

The Debt Avalanche Method

How it works: List all debts from highest interest rate to lowest. Pay minimums on everything, then throw every extra ringgit at the highest-rate debt first.

Example:

Debt Balance Interest Rate Minimum
CIMB Visa RM8,000 18% p.a. RM400
Maybank Gold RM15,000 17% p.a. RM750
AEON Card RM5,000 15% p.a. RM250
Car loan (Proton) RM22,000 3.5% flat RM520

With the avalanche, you attack the CIMB Visa first (18%), then Maybank Gold (17%), then AEON (15%). The car loan at 3.5% flat is last because it's the cheapest debt.

Pros: Minimises total interest paid. Mathematically optimal.
Cons: The highest-rate debt might also be the largest, meaning you won't see a balance hit zero for months. This can feel discouraging.

The Debt Snowball Method

How it works: List all debts from smallest balance to largest. Pay minimums on everything, then throw every extra ringgit at the smallest debt first.

Using the same example, the order becomes:

  1. AEON Card — RM5,000 (smallest)
  2. CIMB Visa — RM8,000
  3. Maybank Gold — RM15,000
  4. Car loan — RM22,000 (largest)

You clear the AEON Card first, then roll that freed-up RM250 minimum into the CIMB payment, creating a growing "snowball" of payments.

Pros: Quick wins build momentum and motivation.
Cons: You pay more interest overall because high-rate debts linger longer.

The Numbers Compared

Assume you have RM500 extra per month beyond all minimums:

Method Months to Debt-Free Total Interest Paid
Avalanche ~32 months ~RM7,800
Snowball ~34 months ~RM8,600
Minimum only ~68 months ~RM19,400

The avalanche saves about RM800 over the snowball in this scenario. Both are dramatically better than minimums only.

When Consolidation Beats Both

Both methods assume you keep paying existing interest rates. But what if you could cut those rates first?

If your credit card debts total RM20,000 or more at 15–18% p.a., a consolidation loan at 5–7% flat changes the equation entirely. Instead of spending 32–34 months strategically juggling payments, you lock in a single lower rate from day one.

Using our example: consolidating the three credit cards (RM28,000 total) at 6% flat over 3 years gives a monthly payment of RM917 and total interest of RM5,040 — beating both the avalanche (RM7,800) and the snowball (RM8,600).

Consolidation is especially powerful when the interest rate gap between your current debts and the consolidation loan is more than 8 percentage points.


Next step: Compare your options with our calculator — see your personalised results on pinjamHub.

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