Credit card debt doesn’t usually show up all at once. It builds in small amounts over time until you wake up one day and realize you’re in way over your head.
Craig understands this situation all too well. He’s 40, earns about $90,000 a year, splits $2,500 rent with his girlfriend, and has done something he’s actually proud of: built up $19,000 in savings.
But he’s also sitting on $13,000 of debt spread across six credit cards, a credit score that’s taken a hit, and a decision he keeps circling back to without much clarity — should he wipe out the debt and start fresh, or hold onto his savings in case life throws something at him?
The cost of holding cash while carrying debt
Craig is trapped in a classic financial catch-22. He feels secure because he has cash in the bank, but his debt is erasing those gains.
On paper, Craig looks like he is in a good position with $19,000 in savings. Even in a top high-yield savings account, for example, that money pulls in around 4% interest — or about $760 a year. If it is sitting in a traditional bank account, it’s earning nickels and dimes.
At roughly 20% interest, every $1,000 Craig carries on a credit card can cost about $200 a year just in interest if it’s not paid down. So instead of his savings slightly growing, his debt is pulling in the opposite direction — and often at a faster pace.
Meanwhile, he is carrying $13,000 in credit card debt spread across six different accounts. With average credit card interest rates hovering near 21%, that debt is costing him roughly $2,700 a year. It’s hard to celebrate a $760 gain with a $2,700 loss hanging over your head.
He’s far from alone. Recent data shows 49% of Americans now consider credit card debt a normal part of life, with the average balance sitting just under $11,000.
However, holding six active balances also creates a secondary problem — it spikes Craig’s credit utilization ratio. Because the “amounts owed” category — primarily driven by credit utilization — accounts for 30% of a FICO score, constantly carrying a high rotation of debt drags his rating down even when he makes every minimum payment on time.
For Craig, it may make the most sense to wipe out those balances immediately to help stop the bleeding.
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A practical way forward
Craig needs a plan that doesn’t leave him second-guessing himself a month later. Before he moves a single dollar, there’s one key question he has to answer: how much cash can he safely use without putting himself in a tight spot?
Wiping out the full $13,000 debt with his $19,000 in savings sounds simple on paper, but it can backfire fast. If an emergency pops up right after, he’s right back to square one — only now with no cushion to fall back on.
While many experts recommend keeping a three-to-six-month emergency fund, Craig doesn’t necessarily need to hit that target overnight. A more realistic middle ground is to split the difference. This means keeping a solid cash buffer untouched, and using the rest to aggressively chip away at the debt.
From there, he has a few options. He could go with the debt avalanche method, tackling the highest-interest card first to minimize the total interest paid over time. Or he might prefer the debt snowball approach, knocking out the smallest balances first to get quick wins and build momentum. Another option is a balance transfer card with a 0% introductory APR for 12 to 21 months, which can pause interest entirely — though he’ll need to factor in a 3% to 5% transfer fee upfront.
Typically, the avalanche method comes out ahead. But in real life, the best strategy is the one Craig can actually stick with long enough to see it through.
At the end of the day, the goal isn’t just wiping out $13,000 in debt. It’s stopping the interest from draining him, keeping enough cash on hand for life’s surprises, and getting back in control of his money.
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Laura Grande is a freelance contributor with nearly 15 years of industry experience. Throughout her career she's written about and edited a range of topics, from personal finance and politics to health and pop culture.
