The pitch is seductive. You owe money on five credit cards at 24% APR. A consolidation loan rolls them all into one payment at 12%. Lower rate, simpler life, faster payoff โ what’s not to like? Plenty, as it turns out. The arithmetic that sells consolidation loans rarely captures what actually happens after you sign.
The product isn’t fraudulent. It’s just frequently misused, and the lenders selling it know exactly which behavioral patterns make their margins reliable.
The interest savings are smaller than they look
A consolidation loan stretches your debt over a longer term. That’s the whole reason your monthly payment drops. If you take a five-year loan at 12% to replace credit cards you would have aggressively paid off in two years, you may pay more in total interest, not less, even though the rate is lower. Lenders advertise the rate; you should be calculating the total cost over the life of the loan. Many borrowers also discover origination fees of 1% to 8% that get baked into the principal, which means you start the loan owing more than your old cards added up to. The math only works in your favor if you make the same aggressive monthly payment you would have made anyway, which most people don’t.
The cards don’t stay closed
Studies from the Federal Reserve and consumer credit bureaus consistently find that a majority of borrowers who consolidate credit card debt run the cards back up within a couple of years. The newly available credit feels like a windfall, and the consolidation loan feels separate from “real” debt. Now you owe the loan plus the cards. This isn’t a character flaw โ it’s a predictable response to suddenly having access to credit again. But it’s also the failure mode the lender is implicitly counting on, because borrowers who reload their cards are exactly the ones who end up paying interest on both products simultaneously.
What actually moves the needle
The debt strategies that work look boring. The avalanche method (paying minimums on everything and throwing extra cash at the highest-rate balance) saves the most interest. The snowball method (smallest balance first) wins on motivation. Either beats consolidation if you can avoid running balances back up. For people who genuinely can’t manage payments, a nonprofit credit counseling agency can negotiate a debt management plan with creditors, often securing rate reductions without a new loan. Bankruptcy, despite its stigma, is the right answer for some people and shouldn’t be ruled out reflexively. None of these options come with the dopamine hit of feeling like you “did something” by getting a loan, which is part of why consolidation gets chosen so often.
The bottom line
Debt consolidation can work โ for a disciplined borrower with a specific plan, a real rate cut, and a closed door behind the old credit lines. For everyone else, it’s a way to feel like you solved a problem while keeping the underlying habits intact. The loan is the easy part. The behavior is the actual fix.
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