Q&A: “Should I Pay Off My Debt or Start Investing?” (You’re Not Alone in This)

Torn between paying off your debt and investing? You’re not the only one. Here’s how to think through the decision — without guilt.

Q: I have some credit card debt and student loans. But I also want to start investing. What should I do first?

A: You’re asking the right question.

Honestly? Most people avoid it altogether — and that’s the real problem.

But the short answer is: it depends on the type of debt.

Q: Okay… what kinds of debt are we talking about?

A: Think of it in three buckets:

  1. Bad debt – credit cards, payday loans, anything over 10–15% interest
  2. Neutral debt – federal student loans, 4–6% range
  3. Good-ish debt – mortgage, maybe even low-interest car loans (if used smart)

If you’re in bucket #1, pay it off. Fast. That interest is killing your future self.

If you’re in #2 or #3, you can start investing while paying it down — especially if your employer offers a 401(k) match, RRSP match, or similar.

Q: But won’t investing grow my money faster?

A: Sometimes, yes.

But here’s the thing: paying off debt is a guaranteed return.

If your loan charges 6%, and the market returns 7%, you’re playing a risky 1% game.

Plus, the emotional return of being debt-free? Huge.

Q: So is it bad to do both at the same time?

A: Not at all.

In fact, a balanced approach is often the most sustainable.

Something like:

  • 60% of extra cash to debt
  • 40% to investing
    Or vice versa, depending on rates and your tolerance.

Q: What if I just feel stuck and overwhelmed?

A: That’s normal.

Debt feels heavy. Investing feels scary. And advice online? Confusing.

Start small.

Pick one card to pay off. Open one investing account.

Momentum > perfection.

Final Thought

You’re not behind.

You’re not bad with money.

You’re just early in the story — and the fact that you’re asking this means you’re on the right page.

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