Tax season isn’t just about forms and refunds it’s a natural moment to reset your financial plan. Whether you owe, expect a refund, or land somewhere in between, this is the perfect time to align your money with your goals. The big question: Should you pay down debt, build savings, or both? Let us help you make a smart, balanced plan.
1. Start with a Quick Financial Audit
- List your debts: balances, interest rates, minimums.
- Check your savings: emergency fund total, goal accounts, upcoming expenses.
- Review cash flow: monthly income, essential spending, room for extra payments.
- Set priorities: what matters most in the next 3–6 months?
Pro tip: If high‑interest debt is over 15–20% APR, prioritizing it often has the biggest long‑term payoff.
2. When Paying Down Debt Should Come First
Focus on debt reduction when:
- You’re carrying high‑interest credit card balances
- Minimum payments are eating your budget
- Variable rates are rising, or balances feel “stuck”
Best moves now:
- Make a lump‑sum payment using part of your refund
- Consolidate into a fixed‑rate personal loan for predictability
- Use avalanche (highest APR first) or snowball (smallest balance first) to create momentum
3. When Building Savings Should Come First
Prioritize savings when:
- Your emergency fund is below $1,000 (starter) or 3–6 months (full)
- You expect near‑term expenses (car repair, medical, insurance premiums)
- You want to avoid new debt by planning ahead
Smart saving options:
4. The Case for Doing Both (and How to Split It)
If you can do both, consider a simple split:
- 50/50 if you need momentum on both fronts
- 70/30 to debt if interest is high (APR > 15%)
- 70/30 to savings if your emergency fund is thin
Example: $2,000 refund → $1,200 toward highest‑APR card, $800 to High‑Yield Savings.
5. Make Your Reset Stick: Systems That Support Your Plan
- Direct deposit into savings first, then fund spending
- Automatic extra payments on your top‑priority debt
- Account alerts + eStatements to stay on top of due dates
- Quarterly plan check‑ins (April, July, October, January)
Take Your Next Step with Confidence
Tax time can be a turning point. Whether you’re building savings, paying down debt, or optimizing both, a thoughtful plan today creates momentum all year.