Stories and advice from Jaxon Forge, Founder of MoneyForged.com
Raw, no-fluff truth on wealth psychology, iron discipline, free-market capitalism, tariffs, and the systems that separate the self-made from everyone else.
Credit Card Payoff Calculator: Crush Debt Before It Crushes You | Jaxon Forge
Credit Card Payoff Calculator: Crush Debt Before It Crushes You
High earners still stay broke because of silent killers like credit card interest. I learned this the hard way. Use this tool to see exactly how fast you can be debt-free — and what the real cost of minimum payments actually is.
Stories & systems from Jaxon Forge, Founder of MoneyForged.com
Credit Card Payoff Calculator
YOUR FREEDOM TIMELINE
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Months to Debt-Free
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Total You Will Pay
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Interest You’ll Lose
“I was making good money but my credit cards still had me in a chokehold. Minimum payments felt safe — until I ran the numbers and saw I was about to hand the banks over $9,400 in interest on a single card. That was the day I stopped feeding the beast and started the aggressive payoff plan that got me completely debt-free in 14 months. The calculator above is exactly what I wish I had back then.”
— Jaxon Forge Founder, MoneyForged.com
Why Most People Stay Broke Even When They Make Good Money
Credit card debt is one of the most common silent killers of wealth. You feel like you’re managing it with minimum payments, but the interest compounds against you every single day. I lived it. High income, nice lifestyle on paper, but the invisible drain kept my net worth flat for years.
The fix isn’t complicated — it’s ruthless execution. Pay more than the minimum. Cut the lifestyle creep. Treat every extra dollar like a soldier in the war against debt. Use this calculator to make the invisible visible, then commit to the plan.
How to Use This Calculator Like a Self-Made Man
Enter your real balance and interest rate (be honest — the banks already know).
Decide what monthly payment you can actually sustain without negotiating with yourself.
Hit calculate and face the truth.
Then do the hard thing: increase that payment by whatever you can cut from comfort this month.
Remember: Comfort masquerading as “balance” is the silent killer of wealth.
Pay the discipline tax early. Your future self — and your bank account — will thank you.
Smash debt like it’s 3 AM and you’re the only one awake. Snowball vs Avalanche—see the numbers glow when you win.
Hey forge crew, what’s good? It’s Jaxon Forge here, founder of MoneyForged.com, and welcome back to the channel. If you’re one of the 292,000 of you grinding alongside me—and that number keeps climbing every single day—thank you for showing up. That means you’re not just consuming content. You’re hunting for the real playbook, the stuff that actually moves money in your direction instead of bleeding it out the back door.
Today we’re going deep on one of the topics I get asked about most in the comments and DMs: how to pay down debt faster in 2026. Not the fluffy Dave Ramsey memes or the TikTok hacks that fall apart in month two. Real, battle-tested strategies I used to dig myself out of a $45,000 hole in my early 20s—credit cards, student loans, a car note that felt like a noose. I was making decent money even back then, but every dollar was disappearing faster than it arrived. Comfort masquerading as “balance” had me convinced minimum payments were fine. They weren’t. Interest was compounding against me like a silent killer, turning what should have been temporary debt into a permanent tax on my freedom.
I clawed my way out in under three years and turned that pain into my first $100k net worth without a fancy degree or rich parents. If you’re sitting there right now with balances staring you in the face, heart rate spiking every time the mail comes, this episode is for you. We’re covering what actually works, the math behind it, and—more importantly—the stuff that sounds good but keeps most people broke forever.
Let’s start with the foundation most skip: face the battlefield.
Open every statement. Every single one. Write it down or plug it into a spreadsheet or Undebt.it—whatever tool you like. Debt name, current balance, interest rate, minimum payment. No sugarcoating. When I did this for the first time, the total number hit like a punch. But hiding from it only lets interest keep winning. You can’t kill what you won’t look at.
Now the strategies that actually accelerate payoff.
First and non-negotiable: pay more than the minimum. Every time. Minimum payments are designed by banks to keep you in debt for decades. On a typical credit card, the minimum might cover mostly interest with pennies toward principal. Even an extra fifty bucks a month changes the trajectory dramatically.
Quick example I still use when people DM me their numbers: five grand on a credit card at twenty percent APR, minimum payment around a hundred bucks. Pay only minimum? You’re looking at nine years and change, plus almost six grand in interest alone. Add just fifty extra per month? You cut the timeline in half and save thousands in interest. In 2026, with average credit card rates still sitting between nineteen and twenty-five percent, every extra dollar you throw at principal is buying you freedom faster.
Automate it. Set it and forget it. The day after payday, make the extra payment hit automatically. I treated mine like rent—non-negotiable. Remove the decision fatigue.
Next level: choose your attack method. There are two main roads here, and both work depending on your wiring.
Option one: debt avalanche. This is the math purist’s favorite. Rank your debts from highest interest rate to lowest. Pay minimums on everything else, then dump every extra dollar into the highest-rate debt until it’s dead. Then roll that full payment to the next highest.
Why it crushes: high-interest debt grows fastest. Killing the twenty-two percent card first stops the bleeding quicker than anything else. Over the long run, you pay the least total interest. When I ran my numbers back in the day, avalanche saved me several thousand compared to just winging it.
Option two: debt snowball. This is Dave Ramsey’s signature move, and it saved my motivation when I was burned out. Rank debts from smallest balance to largest, ignore the rates. Minimums on everything, extra cash goes to the smallest balance. Pay it off fast, get the quick win, roll that payment forward like a snowball picking up speed.
The power here isn’t the math—it’s the psychology. When you’re buried, seeing an entire debt disappear in a couple months gives you proof you can win. I knocked out a fifteen-hundred-dollar store card first. That victory lit a fire I hadn’t felt in years. If motivation is your weak link, start here. You might pay a little more interest overall, but you’ll actually finish.
I blended both. Started with snowball to build momentum, then switched to avalanche once the small ones were gone. Pick what keeps you in the fight longest.
Third accelerator: consolidation or balance transfers—if done right.
Move high-rate debt to a lower-rate spot. Zero-percent intro APR balance transfer cards (usually twelve to twenty-one months, three to five percent fee) or a personal consolidation loan at single-digit rates. I transferred a chunk of my nineteen-percent cards to a zero-percent promo once. Freed up cash flow immediately.
Critical rules though: only do this if the new effective rate is meaningfully lower. Shop aggressively—use sites like LendingTree or Credible. And freeze the old cards. Cut them up if you have to. I learned that the hard way—transferred once, then mindlessly charged the old card again. Dug the hole deeper. Don’t repeat my mistake.
Fourth: attack from both sides—income up, expenses down.
Debt payoff isn’t just defense; it’s offense. I rewired my brain to crave hard work instead of comfort. Trained myself to wake at four-thirty without an alarm. Side hustles became non-negotiable. Freelancing, consulting, turning one boring skill into multiple income streams. Even five hundred to a thousand extra a month changes everything.
On the cut side: track every dollar. I used to think I was “frugal” until I actually tracked. Subscriptions, eating out, impulse buys—found three hundred a month easy to reclaim. Call creditors and negotiate rates. “I’ve been a good customer for years—can you drop my APR?” I got one card from eighteen to twelve percent just by asking.
Last resort only: debt management plans or settlement through a nonprofit like NFCC. They can negotiate lower rates or lump-sum payoffs at thirty to fifty cents on the dollar. Hurts credit short-term, but can be a lifeline if debt is over fifty percent of your income. I never went there, but I know guys who did and came out the other side.
Now the brutal truth—what doesn’t work and why most people stay stuck.
Paying only minimums. Slow financial suicide.
Using new debt to pay old debt without a freeze on spending. Classic trap.
Chasing motivation instead of building systems. Motivation is a visitor; discipline is a resident.
Ignoring the root: debt is often unexamined fear dressed up as laziness. Until you face why you’re spending to feel better, you’ll keep rebounding.
No lifestyle change. You can’t out-earn reckless habits forever.
My simple framework that got me free and keeps me free:
One: full inventory—no hiding. Two: pick avalanche or snowball based on your psychology. Three: automate extra payments and treat them like oxygen. Four: boost income and cut ruthlessly—aim for at least twenty percent of take-home going to debt. Five: track weekly. Small progress compounds. Six: celebrate privately. Grind in silence. Posting wins early invites distraction.
When the last payment clears? Do the private scream. I did. Felt like chains falling off.
Forge crew, 2026 is still early. Rates are high, but so is opportunity if you move now. Pay the discipline tax early or pay interest forever. The choice is yours every single day.
If this episode hit you square in the chest, drop your current total debt number in the comments below—one number, no story needed. Just the truth. Seeing thousands of you own it publicly creates accountability like nothing else.
Smash that like button if you’re committing to extra payments this week. Subscribe and turn on notifications so you never miss the next no-BS drop.
You’ve got the playbook now. No more excuses.
Until next time—grind harder than yesterday. Forge your wealth. I’ll see you in the comments.