Best Debt Reduction Spreadsheet For Mac

The best debt tracker spreadsheet Start tackling your debt in a matter of minutes. Meet the Easy Money Spreadsheet. What you'll receive: 1. Debt Tracker Template 2. Bill Pay Checklist 3. Budgeting Spreadsheet 4. Keeping track of payments and balances is important, so download the free InCharge debt reduction spreadsheet, which will help you calculate your repayments and keep track after you input your balances, interest and payments. Organize unsecured debts by name, balance due, interest rate, monthly payment and due date. Apr 29, 2017 - Choose from these free debt reduction planning spreadsheets to determine which debt to pay down first using the debt snowball method.

Price:$9.88
Creator/Developer: ExcelGeek
Date/Version: January, 2009 (Version 4.0)
System Requirements: Windows (NT, 2000, ME, XP, Vista, Win7),
or Mac OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion or older (NOT certified for 10.9 Mavericks at this time)
Software Requirements: Excel 2003 or later (Windows);
Excel 2004 or 2011 (Mac)
Other Requirements: Macros Enabled in Excel [What's this?]

[NOTE: This spreadsheet will NOT work with OpenOffice.]

[Mac Users: Yes! It will work on Macs; OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion or older, and Excel 2004 OR Excel 2011 for Mac required. 2011 for Mac preferred. (NOTE: Excel 2008 for Mac will NOT work, nor will versions before Excel 2004 for Mac. Also, the RPC is NOT certified for OS X 10.9 Mavericks at this time.)]

Looking for a spreadsheet that will create your debt-paydown plan?

Heard about the 'Debt Snowball,' but now you want to see exactly what it could do for your family?

Want a clean, efficient way to print and monitor your plan as you make monthly progress?

Well, ExcelGeek (creator of his widely-popular Freedom Account spreadsheet) has stepped up to the plate. He's now released his 'Rapid Payoff Calculator.'

It takes care of all the issues above, and then some. Here's a quick batch of screenshots:


...and that's just the first worksheet! Here's more:


If you're thinking to yourself, Wow, that's some serious spreadsheet action right there! ... well, you're absolutely right. It is!

Spreadsheet Requires Excel 2003 or Later

Before we go much further, it's important to understand what this spreadsheet requires. ExcelGeek's Rapid Payoff Calculator isn't a stand-alone program. It's an Excel spreadsheet, which means it requires that you have Microsoft Excel (at least Excel 2003) installed on your PC for it to operate.

As far as operating system requirements, it should work on Windows 2000 and all later versions.

Mac Users: Yes, the RPC will work on Macs! Requirements are Mac OS X and Excel 2004 for Mac (versions earlier or later will not work).

PC Users: To run the Rapid Payoff Calculator, you will need a computer with:
  1. At least Windows XP, and
  2. At least Excel 2003, and
  3. Macros enabled in Excel. (See below!)
Microsoft Works Uers: No, the Rapid Payoff Calculator will not operate with Works.OpenOffice Users: No, the Rapid Payoff Calculator will not work with OpenOffice.Mac Users: Yes! It will work on Macs (OS X and Excel 2004 or Excel 2011 for Mac required). (NOTE: Excel 2008 for Mac will not run the RPC, nor will versions before Excel 2004 for Mac.)

* Spreadsheet Utilizes Macros *

ExcelGeek's Rapid Payoff Calculator cannot function without macros being enabled in Excel. By default, macros are disabled in Excel, but enabling them isn't difficult. You can find my step-by-step instructions for doing this at my How to Enable Macros in Excel page.

Excel and Macros: Put simply, Excel utilizes a language called Visual Basic which allows users to create 'programs inside the program.' These smaller programs are called 'macros.' They allow for powerful automation and problem-solving within Excel.
In the case of the Rapid Payoff Calculator, macros are absolutely vital. They're used to build and rebuild the spreadsheet's formulas each time the spreadsheet opens, as well as to compress the file's size when it closes. Macros also automatically sort your data as you enter it.
IYM Article: How to Enable Macros in Excel

Rapid Payoff Calculator Features

Here's a quick rundown of the Rapid Payoff Calculator's features:

Choice of four sorting options (by balance, by rate, etc.).
Spreadsheet automatically 'snowballs' your payments, showing you how much to send to each creditor every month.
Compares time and interest savings depending on sort order.
Easily see how your Rapid Payoff compares to what you're doing now.
Easily see the effects of adding extra cash to your debt paydown.

For lots more details, just keep reading!

What's the Price?

We're selling the Rapid Payoff Calculator spreadsheet for $9.88. Of this amount, ExcelGeek gets $8, and IYM gets $1.88 (minus any fees).

Following your electronic payment via Paypal, you'll be able to download the spreadsheet instantly. (Note: This does not apply to Paypal 'eCheck' payments, as they may take up to five business days to clear.)

Carries a Full 30-Day Guarantee

Like all of my for-pay spreadsheets, ExcelGeek's Rapid Payoff Calculator is guaranteed.

If you're not happy with it for some reason, just contact me within 30 days of purchase, and I'll refund your money.

Plan a Paydown for Up to 15 Debts

ExcelGeek's Rapid Payoff Calculator can build a paydown plan for up to fifteen debts!

In its default setting, the spreadsheet uses a payoff method similar to that suggested by Mary Hunt's Rapid Debt Reduction Plan. Here your Rapid Payoff plan will be structured with debts being paid in order from shortest to longest payoff.

You can now change the sorting method, though! (More on that below.) And no matter what sorting method you choose, the spreadsheet creates a Rapid Payoff Schedule (printable!) which shows you exactly what amounts to send to which creditors on a monthly basis.

Why pay debts by 'payoff time' rather than interest rate? There are really two main schools of thought regarding debt payoffs. One camp believes debts should always be paid in order from highest to lowest interest rate; the other suggests that debts be paid from smallest to largest balance (or shortest to longest payoff time).
This latter plan has gained ground in recent years, thanks to personal-finance personalities like Dave Ramsey and Mary Hunt. Getting rid of high-interest debts first may save more money compared to other plans, but Ramsey and Hunt firmly believe (and I agree) that your chances of becoming DEBT FREE increase dramatically when you can see yourself making progress — when you can quickly mark debts off of your list. Paying your debts in order of shortest to longest payoff (or smallest to largest balance) accomplishes this.
'The Debt Snowball is designed the way it is,' Ramsey writes in Total Money Makeover, 'because we are more concerned with modifying behavior than correct mathematics. Sometimes motivation is more important than math. This is one of those times.'
Thus, for Ramsey and Hunt, it's all about motivation — getting entire debts crossed off your list quickly and then rolling each paid debt's payment into the next one. The Rapid Payoff Calculator was initially set up to mimic this: Your debts' balances are generally more important than their interest rates.

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NEW! Four Different Sorting Options

With Version 4 of the RPC, how you sort your debts is entirely up to you!

Whether you're a follower of Dave Ramsey's Debt Snowball plan and want to pay off your debts from lowest to highest balance, or you're adhering to Mary Hunt's Rapid Debt Repayment Plan and attacking debts with lowest payoff times first ... or whether you want to go the old-fashioned route and pay your highest-rate debts first, the Rapid Payoff Calculator has you covered.

And how's this for control: You can now also pay off your debts in your own preferred order! Just select the RPC's 'Disable Sorting' option and you're all set!

(I wholeheartedly understand why you'd want to pay off Uncle Mort before any of your other creditors. That guy's a nutcase.)

ExcelGeeks Talks About the Rationale
Behind His RPC

I asked ExcelGeek to talk a little bit about all the fancy number-crunching that his Rapid Payoff Calculator does. Here's what he had to say:

For several years, my RPC has been successfully sorting debts using the shortest-to-longest-payoff method, which calculates a payoff order based on three factors:
1) the amount of debt;
2) the interest rate; and
3) the monthly payment.
To me, this strategy always seemed very logical, since it always pays off debts in the shortest-calculated order.
Periodically I would get an email from a customer asking me why I prefer this strategy over “lowest-to-highest balance” or “highest-to-lowest interest.” They would share their debt scenarios with me, and I would work up comparisons for them. Here’s the bottom line: Regardless of what sorting strategy we used, the date they would eventually become debt-free was almost always the same, and any difference in interest was minimal.
How is it possible? Because the Rapid Payoff Plan’s “snowball” (rolling paid-off debt payments into the next debt’s payment) is the engine that will get you to debt freedom — with or without a calculator — and regardless of how you sort your debts for payoff.
Working through the math, I have always known this to be true – but now I’ve built the RPC to allow for different sorting methods. So my customers can easily compare and prove this for themselves with a simple click of the mouse.
Also, with any of the payoff strategies, users can accelerate payoff on selected debts (including debts with higher interest rates, if desired) simply by increasing the monthly payment they enter in the Creditor list. In addition, a double-whammy, faster-payoff effect occurs when they add a Monthly Booster amount!
So which strategy do I recommend?
In general, I still prefer the shortest-payoff method, followed by the “lowest-to-highest balance” method. In my opinion, both of these strategies offer the best balance between math and motivation. Each provides small victories (paid-off debts) much earlier in the Plan, which builds confidence and momentum on your road to debt freedom!
Interest isn’t cheap, of course ... but what price do we put on momentum and motivation? That’s the question RPC users can now answer for themselves!

And there you have it — straight from the guy who's forgotten more about Excel than I'll probably ever know.

View Time and Interest Savings Easily

Want to see how changing your debt paydown order affects the time it'll take to achieve debt freedom? Want to see how much you'll save in interest by paying debts with high interest rates first?

The RPC makes it simple.

Once you've input all your debts, simply change the sort order, give Excel a few moments to crunch the numbers (it ain't always easy!), and then view the figures beneath the accompanying chart. Voila — the answers are there:

Many times, regardless of the sort order of your debt paydown plan, what you'll find is that there simply isn't much difference in the total dollars saved by paying debts in different orders.

What affects interest savings most? Well, the higher the interest rates you're paying, and the larger the amount of dollars revolving at those high rates, the more your savings will be affected by how you sort your debts.
If interest savings are the most important factor to you, then paying your highest-rate debts first is almost always the method to choose. However, as Dave Ramsey makes clear in his Baby Steps plan, there are really good reasons for not paying your debts off in this manner! (The motivation you get from marking debts off your list quickly is a huge deal, you know!)

Create Two Kinds of Printable Progress Charts

Here's what I believe to be the single best feature of the Rapid Payoff Calculator: Once you've input your debts and your Monthly Booster payment (if any), the spreadsheet creates printable payoff progress charts.

What's a 'Monthly Booster' payment? When creating your payoff plan, you can elect to add a 'Monthly Booster' payment. This is simply an additional amount you choose to add to your debt payments each month. The RPC automatically applies this additional 'booster' to your monthly payment for the next debt on your paydown list.
Obviously, the larger the Booster you can add, the faster your paydown progresses!

Here's a look at the printable RAPID PAYOFF SCHEDULE worksheet, which shows your plan broken down by each month's payment:

Print that out and tape it to your refrigerator ... your desk ... your dresser mirror ... whatever! Whenever you make a payment, cross it off the schedule. Watch yourself get closer and closer to your ultimate DEBT FREEDOM!

The second printable worksheet — the RAPID PAYOFF BALANCE — lets you see an estimate of your remaining balances by month:

Stop taking on new debt, make those Rapid Payoff payments, and watch those balances drop!

See Comparisons of 3 Paydown Plans

The Rapid Payoff Calculator shows you the results of following three different paydown plans: Falling, Fixed, and the (turbocharged!) Rapid Payment Plan.

A 'Falling' payment plan is what the suits at the credit-card companies would love to see you undertake. In a Falling Plan, your payments are based on a percentage of your outstanding balance; therefore, your minimum payment decreases as your balance decreases.

Kids, this is financial death. And the RPC makes it easy to see why.

Best Debt Reduction Spreadsheet For Macs

In case you're wondering, the goal of a Falling Plan like this is to keep you in debt — and paying sweet, sweet interest — for as long as possible.

Here (with some sample data) is what the spreadsheet shows you regarding the Falling Payment Plan (which, of course, you're never going to use, right?):

NOTE: Since most of us also have debts (like auto loans, personal loans, and such) whose payments don't decrease as the balance decreases, the data generated in the Falling Payment Plan won't be exact. But even so, the RPC paints a vivid picture of the financial damage so often caused by creditors and their 'easy and affordable' terms.

Fixed Payment Plan

The 'Fixed Payment Plan' shows what happens when you keep your payments at a fixed level — that is, you keep making the same payments that you're making now, regardless of what your creditors request.

Now this is why you bought tickets to the show! Compare what happens with your total interest paid (and payoff time) when you simply utilize the Rapid Payoff Calculator's 'snowball' plan. The difference will be ... well, enriching:

To close out the comparisons, you get a summary section, like this:

Questions? Comments? Contact Us!

Got a question or issue? Don't hesitate — contact either me by email or ExcelGeek by email. We'll get back to you as soon as possible!

Ready to Purchase?

I hope you're convinced that ExcelGeek's Rapid Payoff Calculator is just the tool to help you with your quest for financial freedom. Just click one of the payment buttons below to purchase your copy!

Purchase & Download

Downloading the Rapid Payoff Calculator couldn't be easier! Simply pay with either PayPal or Google Checkout, and then download the Rapid Payoff Calculator instantly! (Credit/debit cards work great; no sign-up required.)

Price: $9.88

Frequently Asked Questions

Some of my debts have a variable interest rate. The rates on my credit cards, for instance, change a couple of times per year. Can the RPC handle these?

Sure can! The RPC will handle variable-rate debts just fine, so long as you re-enter your current balances and rates at least every couple of months or so (or anytime you simply feel like doing it). I recommend doing this anyway, actually, since I'm one of those dorky guys who REALLY likes my spreadsheets to be as accurate as possible at any given time.

Whenever you see a rate change in one of your debts, all you need to do is open up your RPC spreadsheet, enter the new rate (as well as its current balance — you're in Super Debt Payoff mode, so you're a stickler for details, right? — and reprint your plan. I haven't yet run into a card that changes its rate every month ... but I have no doubt that they're out there.

And even if they are, the RPC will happily crush them, too.

Best Debt Reduction Spreadsheet For Macbook Air

What if I'm in the middle of my plan, I find some unexpected money, and I put it toward my debt?

Fantastic! Send that money to the next (first) debt on your list. Then update all your balances in the Rapid Payoff Calculator, and reprint your plan!

With this spreadsheet, are you able to enter one-time payments — say, if you want to pay extra one month?

Yes, but not in the way you might think.

Make whatever extra payment(s) you wish, then update your debt balances (at the top of the spreadsheet) to reflect the new balances after your extra payment. Then reprint your plan.

If you wish to see the effect the extra payment had on your debt paydown, simply compare the new printout to your old one.

What if I can't make my Booster payment for a month or two? Or what if I see that I can increase it?

Both of these things constitute a change in your Rapid Payoff plan. And that's fine — change happens. Of course we would all prefer to experience positive change, but that's just not how Life works. In any case, when things like this happen, it's a good idea to look up all your debts' current balances and re-enter them into the spreadsheet. Then adjust your Booster payment, and reprint the plan as necessary.

When I enter in a balance on a credit card of, say, $10,000, and an interest rate of 18 percent, and a payment of $200 per month, the RPC tells me that the payoff is 0.8 years. How can that be?

You just need to enable macros in Excel. Once that's done, the spreadsheet's calculations will adjust and will be correct!

I've entered a few of my debts, and I get a bright yellow message telling me that 'Information Missing or Payments Exceed 100 Years.' What now?

Your message probably looks like this:

Free Spreadsheet For Mac

Just verify that you've entered the correct figures. The RPC's calculated scenarios max out at 100 years or 1,200 months. If you've entered the correct figures for your debts, it's most likely that the card companies have you EXACTLY where they want you: If you stick to their 'Falling' payment plan, where payments decline as your balance declines, you'll be paying them for a hundred years or more.

If nothing else, this should emphasize the need for you to dramatically restructure your debt payoff plan — but that's precisely why you purchased the RPC, isn't it?

I live in Great Britain, and would like the Rapid Payoff Calculator to show amounts in pounds (GBP). Can you help?

Sure can. Once you purchase the RPC spreadsheet, contact either me by email or ExcelGeek by email. We'll send you the version of the RPC which uses GBP instead of dollars.

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