If you’re carrying credit card or loan debt, you’ve probably wondered whether it’s worth squeezing out an extra $50 or $100 a month to pay it down faster. The honest answer is: it depends on your balance and interest rate, but the effect is almost always bigger than people expect. Below is the real math — calculated month-by-month, not estimated — across three common debt situations.
What an Extra Payment Actually Does
Every debt payment is split two ways: part covers the interest that accrued that month, part reduces your actual balance. Early on, most of your payment goes toward interest — especially on high-APR credit cards. An extra payment goes entirely toward the balance, which means it also shrinks the interest charged every month after that. That compounding effect is why small increases can produce outsized results.
Example 1: $5,000 Balance at 22% APR
Starting with a $150 monthly payment:
| Monthly Payment | Time to Pay Off | Total Interest Paid |
|---|---|---|
| $150 (baseline) | 52 months | $2,798 |
| $200 (+$50) | 34 months | $1,750 |
| $250 (+$100) | 26 months | $1,286 |
| $350 (+$200) | 17 months | $851 |
Adding just $50 a month here cuts more than a year and a half off the payoff time and saves over $1,000 in interest — roughly 37% less interest for a 33% bigger payment. That’s the leverage effect of paying down principal early.
Example 2: $10,000 Balance at 20% APR
Starting with a $275 monthly payment:
| Monthly Payment | Time to Pay Off | Total Interest Paid |
|---|---|---|
| $275 (baseline) | 57 months | $5,499 |
| $325 (+$50) | 44 months | $4,140 |
| $375 (+$100) | 36 months | $3,336 |
| $475 (+$200) | 27 months | $2,419 |
Here, doubling the extra payment from $50 to $100 doesn’t just save proportionally more — it saves $804 more on top of the first $1,359, because you’re compounding the reduction in balance faster.
Example 3: $15,000 Balance at 19% APR
Starting with a $400 monthly payment:
| Monthly Payment | Time to Pay Off | Total Interest Paid |
|---|---|---|
| $400 (baseline) | 58 months | $7,937 |
| $450 (+$50) | 48 months | $6,493 |
| $500 (+$100) | 42 months | $5,509 |
| $600 (+$200) | 33 months | $4,246 |
Even at a larger balance, the pattern holds: an extra $200 a month here roughly cuts the payoff time in half and saves nearly $3,700 in interest compared to the baseline payment.
The Pattern Across All Three
Notice that in every example, the first $50 of extra payment saves more interest, proportionally, than the next $50. This is because your balance is highest early on, so extra principal reductions early in the loan have more months to “not accrue interest” than reductions made later. Practically, this means:
- Even a small, sustainable extra payment (like $50) is worth doing — you don’t need a dramatic budget overhaul to see a real result.
- If you have multiple debts, it usually matters more which debt you put extra money toward than exactly how much extra you add — that’s what the Debt Snowball vs. Avalanche calculator is built to show you.
- If you’re only making minimum payments on a credit card, the math is worse than these examples because minimums shrink as your balance does — see the Credit Card Payoff Calculator for how that plays out with your actual numbers.
Try It With Your Own Numbers
These examples use round numbers to show the pattern clearly, but your actual balance, APR, and budget will be different. Plug your real numbers into the Debt Payoff Calculator to see your exact payoff date and interest cost — and how much a specific extra amount would save you.
All figures above were calculated using standard monthly amortization (interest accrued on the remaining balance each month, applied before the payment). Actual results may vary slightly based on your card issuer’s exact interest calculation method and any new charges added to the balance.