AbraCalc

Pay Off $10,000 Credit Card at 18% vs. Invest $800/Month

Compare whether you come out ahead paying off a $10,000 balance at 18% APR or investing $800 per month at an expected 7% return.

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How to use this tool

  1. Enter your debt balance and its APR.
  2. Enter the monthly cash you could put toward either debt or investing.
  3. Set your expected annual investment return and the tax rate on gains.
  4. Choose a time horizon in years.
  5. Read the verdict, compare the two final net-worth figures, and check the crossover chart and breakeven return.

Run the numbers on paying off high-interest credit card debt versus putting that money into investments.

Frequently asked questions

Why is the breakeven return usually equal to my debt APR?
Paying down a dollar of debt earns you a guaranteed return equal to the APR. Investing that dollar instead only wins if its after-tax return exceeds the APR. So the tie point — the breakeven — is the APR itself. If your expected after-tax return is below it, pay the debt; if above, invest.
Should I really ignore the emotional side?
No. Math says invest whenever your after-tax return beats the APR, but guaranteed debt payoff is risk-free while market returns are not. Many people rationally pay off high-interest debt first for the certainty and peace of mind even when the spread is small — the verdict notes when it’s close to a tie.
What return should I assume?
A common long-run assumption for a diversified stock portfolio is 7–10% before inflation and taxes. Be conservative: enter a realistic after-fee number, then let the tax field reduce it further. Guaranteed debt payoff has no such uncertainty.