
Track debts
Store balances, APR, minimum payment, due day, debt type, and notes.
Compare strategies
Review avalanche and snowball payoff orders before choosing a plan.
Export payments
Add the generated schedule to a dedicated Debt Payoff Plan calendar account.
Open the planner
Open Debt from the app navigation. The planner scans your CalBudget data and shows debt suggestions, tracked debts, income estimates, and payoff plan controls. Debt payoff planning is part of the consumer CalBudget app. It uses your personal CalBudget data, not CalBudget Business data.Add debts
You can add debts in two ways:- Accept a detected debt suggestion
- Add a debt manually
- Name
- Debt type
- Balance
- APR
- Minimum payment
- Due day
- Notes, if needed
Review income and extra budget
The planner estimates income patterns from calendar data when possible. You can adjust or exclude income patterns before exporting a plan. You can also set an extra monthly budget. If you do not set one, CalBudget can estimate extra payoff capacity from monthly income after minimum payments.Choose a strategy
CalBudget supports two payoff strategies:Avalanche
Focuses extra payments on higher-interest debts first.
Snowball
Focuses extra payments on smaller balances first.
Generate the plan
Select Generate after reviewing debts, income, and extra budget. The plan includes:- Total debt
- Estimated total interest
- Estimated months to payoff
- Estimated debt-free date, when available
- Debt payoff order
- Month-by-month payment schedule
- Warnings when the plan is missing data or may not be feasible
Export to calendar
After generating a plan, you can export it to the calendar. CalBudget asks for the current account balance to set the starting point for the Debt Payoff Plan calendar account. The export creates scheduled payment transactions in a dedicatedDebt Payoff Plan account so you can view the payoff schedule alongside the rest of your cash-flow planning.
Keep the plan current
Refresh the plan when:- A balance changes
- A minimum payment changes
- Your income changes
- You add or remove a debt
- You make an extra payment
- A lender changes APR or terms

