Credit & Debt

Debt Consolidation Guide UK — Simplify Your Debts Into One Payment

Should you consolidate your debts? How debt consolidation works, the different options, when it makes sense, when it doesn't, and what to watch out for.

When you have multiple debts with different interest rates and payment dates, debt consolidation can simplify your finances and potentially save you money. But it is not always the right solution — understanding when it helps and when it does not is important.

How Debt Consolidation Works

StepAction
1List all your current debts, balances, interest rates, and monthly payments
2Compare consolidation options (loan, balance transfer, remortgage)
3Apply for the consolidation product
4Use new funds to pay off existing debts
5Make a single monthly payment on the new product

Consolidation Options

Personal Loan

FeatureDetail
Typical APR5–15% (depending on credit score and amount)
Loan amount£1,000–£25,000
Repayment term1–7 years
Best forMultiple debts totalling £3,000–£25,000
Fixed paymentsYes — makes budgeting easier

Use our personal loan calculator to estimate payments.

Balance Transfer Card

FeatureDetail
Interest rate0% for 12–30 months
Fee0–3.5% of balance
Credit limitVaries (may not cover all debts)
Best forCredit card debt under £10,000
RiskMust clear before 0% ends or revert to 19–25% APR

See our balance transfer guide for more detail.

Remortgage/Further Advance

FeatureDetail
Interest rate4–6% (mortgage rates)
AmountAdded to mortgage
TermUp to 25+ years
Best forLarger debts (£10,000+) if you have equity
RiskDebt is now secured on your home — default means repossession

Comparison Example: £15,000 Total Debt

MethodMonthly PaymentTermTotal InterestTotal Cost
Current debts (avg 18% APR)Various (~£450)5 years~£7,500£22,500
Personal loan (7% APR)£2975 years£2,834£17,834
Remortgage (5%, 15 years)£11915 years£6,364£21,364

Key insight: The remortgage has the lowest monthly payment but costs more total because of the extended term. Always compare total cost, not just monthly payments.

When Consolidation Makes Sense

  • You can get a lower interest rate than your current debts
  • You can afford the monthly payment on the shorter term
  • You will stop using credit for new spending
  • Managing multiple payments is causing missed payments
  • You want a fixed end date to be debt-free

When Consolidation Does NOT Make Sense

Warning SignRisk
New interest rate is higherYou pay more
Extending the term significantlyPay more total interest
Planning to continue using creditDebts build up again
Cannot afford the monthly paymentDefault risk
Consolidating into secured debt (mortgage)Home at risk
Credit score too low for decent ratesMay not qualify for savings

The Debt Consolidation Trap

The biggest risk of consolidation is the “debt cycle”:

  1. Consolidate existing debts
  2. Credit cards are now clear with available balances
  3. Start spending on cards again
  4. End up with consolidation loan plus new credit card debt
  5. Worse off than before

Prevention: Close or freeze credit card accounts after consolidating. Address the spending habits that created the debt.

Step-by-Step Action Plan

  1. List all debts — provider, balance, interest rate, minimum payment, end date
  2. Calculate total monthly payments and total interest you will pay
  3. Check your credit score — use free services
  4. Use eligibility checkers — soft search, no credit impact
  5. Compare total cost (not just monthly payments) across options
  6. Apply for the best option once you have confirmed eligibility
  7. Pay off old debts with the consolidation funds
  8. Set up direct debit for the new payment
  9. Close old credit accounts (or reduce limits)
  10. Create a budget to avoid new debt — see our budget planner guide

Alternative Approaches

If consolidation is not suitable, consider:

OptionBest For
Debt repayment strategies (avalanche/snowball)Self-managed debt payoff
Debt management planNegotiated lower payments with creditors
IVAWriting off some unaffordable debt
BankruptcyLast resort for overwhelming debt
Free debt advice (StepChange, National Debtline)Any debt situation

Getting professional advice is always free — never pay for debt advice. Contact StepChange (0800 138 1111) or Citizens Advice for free, impartial support.