Guide
Debt consolidation rolls several debts into a single new loan with one monthly payment. It can genuinely lower your interest rate and simplify your life — but it can also quietly cost you more than staying put. Whether it helps comes down to the numbers, not the sales pitch. This guide breaks down how consolidation works, when it's a smart move and when it isn't, and walks through a full worked example so you can see the trade-offs before you sign anything.
It's worth being clear up front about what consolidation does and doesn't do. It does not reduce the amount you owe — you still repay the full principal. What it can change is the interest rate, the number of payments you juggle, and how long you take to pay everything off. Those three levers are where all the savings (or hidden costs) live.
You take out one new loan — usually a personal loan — large enough to pay off multiple existing balances. From then on you make a single fixed payment at one interest rate for a set term, instead of tracking several cards with different due dates and rates.
Calculate your weighted-average APR — the blended rate across all current balances. If a consolidation offer beats that rate after fees, and the term doesn't balloon your total interest, it's likely a win. If not, another approach (like the avalanche method) may serve you better.
| Consolidation makes sense when… | …and not when |
|---|---|
| New APR < your weighted-average APR | New APR is similar or higher |
| Fees are small | Fees offset the rate savings |
| Term keeps total interest lower | Longer term raises total interest |
Suppose you carry $15,000 across three cards at a weighted-average APR of about 23%, and you're making roughly $450 a month. At that pace you'd pay several thousand dollars in interest before you're clear.
Now a lender offers a 36-month personal loan at 14% APR with a 5% origination fee ($750). The lower rate helps, but the fee gets added to what you owe, so you're really financing about $15,750. At 14% over 36 months, the monthly payment is roughly $538, and the total interest plus the fee lands well below what you'd have paid staying on the cards — a genuine win, provided you can afford the higher $538 payment and you don't run the cards back up.
Change one variable and the verdict flips. If that same loan were stretched to 60 months to get the payment down to around $355, the extra two years of interest could erase most of the savings, even at 14%. And if the loan were a home-equity loan instead of an unsecured personal loan, you'd be putting your house on the line to pay off credit cards — a very different risk. The rate isn't the whole story; the term, the fee, and the loan type decide whether consolidation truly helps.
Skip the guesswork — the debt consolidation analyzer compares your current debts against a consolidation loan, including fees and term, and flags when consolidating would actually cost you more.
There can be a small, temporary dip from the hard inquiry and the new account when you take out the loan. Over time, paying off revolving card balances can lower your credit utilization, which may help your score. Missing payments on the new loan, however, would hurt it.
No. Consolidation means taking out a new loan to pay existing debts in full at a new rate — you still repay everything you owe. Debt settlement means negotiating to pay less than the full balance, which can seriously damage your credit and may have tax consequences. They're very different, and the CFPB cautions consumers to research settlement companies carefully.
If the best loan you qualify for isn't meaningfully below your weighted-average card APR, consolidation may not save you money, and another approach like the avalanche method could serve you better. A nonprofit credit counselor can review your options at no or low cost. This is general information, not financial advice.