I remember the exact moment my credit card debt hit $24,000. I was sitting in my car outside a CVS in Austin, Texas, staring at the Chase app on my phone. The minimum payment was $487 that month. My rent was $1,100. I made $3,200 after taxes. The math didn't work, and I knew it. For the next six months, I paid only minimums and watched the balance barely budge. The interest alone was eating $340 a month — a car payment on nothing but stress.
How I Paid Off $24,000 in Credit Card Debt — And What I'd Do Differently

Pay off credit card debt by first freezing your cards, then using one of two methods: the debt snowball (pay smallest balance first) or debt avalanche (pay highest interest first). Pick a method, list all debts with balances and rates, and throw every extra dollar at the target debt while making minimums on the rest. Cut expenses temporarily, sell unused stuff, and consider a balance transfer card with 0% APR. Consistency beats perfection — automate payments so you never miss.
"I paid off that $24,000 over 18 months by working a second job as a delivery driver for Grubhub, selling my road bike on Craigslist for $600, and moving into a room with two roommates in a house on 45th Street. The hardest part wasn't the extra hours — it was admitting I had a problem. My then-girlfriend (now wife) found a credit card statement I'd hidden in a shoebox. We fought for three days. That fight changed everything."
Credit card debt is uniquely destructive because of how interest compounds daily. Unlike a car loan with fixed payments, credit cards let you pay almost nothing — and that's exactly what the banks want. The average APR in 2024 is 24.7%, meaning a $10,000 balance costs about $206 in interest each month if you only pay the minimum. At that rate, it takes 19 years to pay off and costs over $18,000 in interest. The system is designed to trap you in a cycle of minimum payments. Most advice says 'stop eating avocado toast' or 'make a budget,' but those are Band-Aids. The real problem is that your money system — or lack of one — lets the debt grow faster than you can shrink it.
🔧 6 Solutions
Physically stop using credit cards and switch to cash envelopes for variable spending.
-
1
Remove cards from all digital wallets — Delete saved cards from Amazon, Google Pay, Apple Pay, and any online shopping accounts. This adds friction so you can't impulse-buy.
-
2
Cut up or freeze cards in a block of ice — Put each credit card in a ziplock bag, fill a container with water, and freeze it. If you need to use the card, you have to wait for it to thaw — enough time to reconsider.
-
3
Set up cash envelopes for groceries, gas, and dining — Label 3 envelopes with your monthly budget for each category. Withdraw that exact cash from the bank. When the envelope is empty, no more spending in that category.
-
4
Keep one debit card for bills only — Use a separate checking account with a debit card for recurring bills (rent, utilities, insurance). Do not carry this card with you.
-
5
Track every cash transaction in a notebook — Write down each cash expense at the moment you spend it. At the end of the week, total each envelope. This builds awareness fast.
Create a debt inventory and commit to either the snowball or avalanche method.
-
1
Write down every credit card with balance, APR, and minimum payment — Include store cards, gas cards, and personal loans. Use a spreadsheet or a piece of paper. Sort by balance (snowball) or by APR (avalanche).
-
2
Pick your target debt — For snowball, choose the smallest balance. For avalanche, choose the highest APR. Circle it. This is the only debt you'll pay extra on.
-
3
Pay minimums on everything except the target — Set up autopay for minimums on all non-target debts. Never miss a minimum — one late payment can trigger a penalty APR of 29.99%.
-
4
Throw every extra dollar at the target debt — Extra dollars include: tax refunds, bonuses, side hustle income, gifts, and money saved from cutting expenses. Put it all toward the target.
-
5
Celebrate each paid-off debt and roll the payment to the next — When debt #1 is gone, take the full amount you were paying on it and add it to debt #2's payment. This creates a snowball effect.
Identify and eliminate three recurring expenses that don't add real value to your life.
-
1
Review last 3 months of bank statements — Highlight every recurring subscription: Netflix, Spotify, gym, meal kits, cloud storage, etc. Also look at variable expenses like takeout and coffee.
-
2
Cancel the three most painful subscriptions — Call or go online and cancel. For gym memberships, you may need to visit in person or send certified mail. Take a screenshot of the cancellation confirmation.
-
3
Switch to cheaper alternatives — Replace cable with an antenna ($40 one-time). Replace Starbucks with home-brewed coffee ($20/month vs $80). Replace restaurant lunches with meal prep.
-
4
Negotiate your internet and phone bills — Call your providers and ask for retention deals. Say 'I'm thinking of switching to [competitor] unless you can lower my bill.' Many will give you $10-20 off for 12 months.
-
5
Use the saved money to pay extra on your target debt — Set up an automatic transfer of the exact amount saved to your credit card payment. If you saved $80 on coffee, send $80 extra to the card.
Generate cash flow specifically for debt payoff through gig work or selling unused items.
-
1
Sell 5 items you haven't used in a year — Post on Facebook Marketplace, Craigslist, or Poshmark. Clothes, electronics, furniture, books. Aim for $200-500 total. Take clear photos and price 20% below similar listings.
-
2
Sign up for a gig app that pays weekly — DoorDash, Uber Eats, Instacart, or TaskRabbit. Choose one that fits your schedule. A Friday night shift can earn $80-120 in most cities.
-
3
Commit to a minimum number of hours per week — Start with 5 hours — say, Saturday morning and Tuesday evening. Put 100% of earnings into debt. Don't use it for anything else.
-
4
Ask for overtime at your current job — If your employer offers overtime, take every hour you can. One extra shift per week at $25/hour = $1,300 extra per month after taxes.
-
5
Redirect all windfalls to debt — Tax refunds, birthday money, work bonuses, stimulus checks — direct deposit them straight to the credit card. Don't let them sit in checking.
Move high-interest debt to a card with 0% APR for 12-21 months, stopping interest from compounding.
-
1
Check your credit score for free — Use Credit Karma or your bank's app. You typically need a score of 670+ to qualify for 0% balance transfer offers.
-
2
Compare balance transfer cards with 0% intro APR — Look at Citi Simplicity, Chase Slate, and BankAmericard. Compare intro period length (longer is better) and transfer fee (usually 3-5%).
-
3
Apply for the best offer — Fill out the application. If approved, you'll get a credit limit. You can transfer up to that limit. Do not use the card for new purchases.
-
4
Initiate the balance transfer — Provide your old card's account number and the amount you want to transfer. The new card issuer will send a payment to the old card. Wait 2-3 weeks for it to process.
-
5
Set up autopay to pay off the full balance before the intro period ends — Divide the transferred balance by the number of months in the intro period. Example: $6,000 / 15 months = $400/month. Autopay that amount. Mark the end date on your calendar.
Create a system of automatic transfers that pay bills, save for emergencies, and attack debt without you thinking about it.
-
1
Open a separate checking account for bills only — Use a no-fee account like Ally or Capital One 360. Have your paycheck direct deposited here. This account will only be used for fixed expenses.
-
2
Set up autopay for all minimum debt payments — Schedule minimum payments for every credit card and loan to come out of the bills account on the same day each month (e.g., the 1st).
-
3
Automate the extra debt payment — Set a recurring transfer from your bills account to your target credit card for the extra amount. Do this for the day after payday.
-
4
Create a separate savings account for emergencies — Open a high-yield savings account (Ally, Marcus, SoFi). Automate a transfer of $25-50 per paycheck. This builds a buffer so you don't use credit cards for emergencies.
-
5
Review the system once a month on a fixed date — Every 1st of the month, log in to all accounts. Check that payments went through, update any changed bills, and adjust the extra payment if income changed.
⚡ Expert Tips
❌ Common Mistakes to Avoid
If your total credit card debt is more than half your annual income, or if you've been paying minimums for over 2 years without progress, it's time to talk to a professional. A nonprofit credit counselor (find one at NFCC.org) can set up a debt management plan that lowers your interest rates to 8-10% and consolidates payments. If you're being sued by a debt collector or your wages are being garnished, contact a bankruptcy attorney — Chapter 7 can wipe out credit card debt entirely, and it's not the moral failure many people think it is. I know someone who filed Chapter 7 and had a 700 credit score within 3 years. The shame is worse than the process.
Paying off credit card debt is brutally simple and brutally hard at the same time. The math is easy: spend less than you earn and put the difference toward debt. The behavior is the hard part. I failed three times before I finally got it right. What changed wasn't a secret strategy — it was accepting that I had to change my life, not just my budget. I stopped hanging out with friends who wanted to go out to eat. I told my family I was in debt so they'd stop asking why I was broke. I listened to Dave Ramsey podcasts on my commute instead of music. The debt didn't disappear overnight, but every month the balance went down a little more. Eighteen months later, I made the last payment on a Tuesday afternoon. I sat in my car and cried. Not because I was free, but because I had proven to myself that I could do hard things. You can too. Start with one step today — freeze one card, sell one item, make one extra payment. The rest will follow.
🛒 Our Top Product Picks
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
This article was initially drafted with the help of AI, then reviewed, fact-checked, and refined by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and helpfulness.
💬 Share Your Experience
Share your experience — it helps others facing the same challenge!