Debt consolidation is one of the most advertised financial products in America — and one of the most misused. The math can work powerfully in your favor or create more debt depending on execution.
The four ways to consolidate debt
1. Personal loan (most common)
Take a new personal loan at a lower rate, use proceeds to pay off higher-rate debts. Best rates in 2026 for excellent credit: 6.5–10.9%. On a $20,000 balance moved from 22% credit card to 9% personal loan: saves approximately $5,200 in interest on a 3-year payoff.
2. Balance transfer credit card (0% intro APR)
Transfer high-interest balances to a card offering 0% APR for 12–21 months. Typical transfer fee: 3–5% of balance. On $10,000 at 0% for 18 months: pay $556/month to clear the debt with zero interest (vs $750+ minimum on original card). Requires good/excellent credit (670+).
3. HELOC or home equity loan
Use home equity to pay off unsecured debt. Rates in 2026: 7.5–9.5% (vs 22%+ on cards). The risk: you've converted unsecured debt to secured debt against your home. Failure to pay can result in foreclosure. Only appropriate for disciplined borrowers with strong emergency funds.
4. Debt management plan (nonprofit credit counseling)
NFCC member nonprofits negotiate lower rates with creditors and create a structured repayment plan. Not a loan — they collect one monthly payment and distribute to creditors. Fee: typically $25–$55/month. Best for: people who can't qualify for consolidation loans and need creditor negotiation.
💰 Consolidation savings calculator
The trap: consolidating without stopping the behavior
The research is stark: 70% of people who consolidate credit card debt into a personal loan run their cards back up within 2 years. Debt consolidation without cutting up (or freezing) the cards and addressing the spending behavior is financial rearranging, not solving.
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