The Debt-Free
Countdown
Most people know they want to be debt-free but have no idea when that actually happens. This tool gives you a real date and shows exactly how extra payments move it closer.
Visualizing the Goal
"Debt-free in 20 months" feels like forever when you're paying minimums in month one. Breaking it into 600 days or 80 weeks with a progress bar changes how it feels. You can see you're moving.
The Compound Effect
Every extra $50 you pay today doesn't just reduce your balance. It shortens your timeline. We show the exact number of days each extra payment removes, so you can see what's worth it before you decide.
The minimum payment trap: how banks keep you in debt forever
Credit card minimum payments are calculated to keep you paying for as long as possible. A typical minimum is 1–2% of your balance or $25, whichever is higher. On a $10,000 balance at 20% APR, the minimum payment is roughly $200/month — but only about $33 of that goes toward principal. At that rate, it would take over 30 years to pay off the balance, and you'd pay more than $16,000 in interest on top of the original $10,000. Minimum payments are not a payoff strategy. They are a revenue model for banks.
Finding the extra $100/month that moves your debt-free date
On a $15,000 balance at 22% APR with a $300/month minimum payment, adding just $100 extra per month moves your payoff date forward by roughly 28 months and saves over $4,200 in interest. That extra $100 doesn't need to come from one place. Cancel one streaming service ($15). Cook at home twice more per week ($40). Skip one restaurant meal ($45). These aren't permanent sacrifices — they're temporary trade-offs with a specific end date. Visentor shows you exactly how many days each extra dollar removes from your countdown, so you can decide which trade-offs are worth it.
Debt milestones worth celebrating
The debt payoff journey has natural checkpoints that deserve recognition: the first card reaching 0 (psychological momentum), hitting 50% of total debt eliminated (mathematical turning point — your interest charges start dropping faster), crossing below $5,000 total (the finish line feels real), and the final 0. Plan a specific, inexpensive reward for each milestone before you start. Not because you need a reward, but because your brain needs a finish line to stay motivated. The research on behavioral finance is clear: people who set milestone rewards are significantly more likely to complete long-term goals.
The psychology of a debt-free date: why a specific date changes everything
Saying "I want to be debt-free someday" is a wish. Saying "I will be debt-free by March 14, 2027" is a plan. The specificity changes how your brain processes the goal. Vague goals feel overwhelming because they have no end. A concrete date gives you something to count down to, something to protect, and a clear benchmark to measure every financial decision against. 'Should I buy this?' becomes 'Is this worth pushing my debt-free date back by three days?' Suddenly, every choice has a quantifiable cost — and most impulse purchases look very different when framed that way.
Every month you wait costs you interest. Start your free payoff plan today.
Add your cards in 2 minutes, pick a strategy, and get a payoff plan built on the same daily-interest math your bank uses.