Debt Consolidation in India: When It Helps & How to Do It
Last verified: June 2026. Rates, premiums and rules change — small-savings rates are reviewed quarterly; confirm current terms before investing. General information, not financial advice.
Debt consolidation means combining several high-interest debts — credit cards, personal loans — into a single, lower-interest loan with one EMI. Done right, it cuts your interest and simplifies repayment. Done wrong, it just resets the clock.
How it works
You take one new loan (or balance transfer) large enough to pay off the others, then repay just that one. The aim is a lower interest rate and a single, predictable EMI instead of juggling many.
Common routes
- Personal loan for consolidation — unsecured, faster, rate depends on your profile.
- Balance transfer of credit-card dues to a lower-rate card or a personal loan (credit-card interest of ~36–42% a year is the most expensive debt to clear first).
- Loan against property / gold — secured, lower rate, but you pledge an asset; see LAP vs personal loan.
When it helps — and when it doesn’t
It helps if the new loan’s rate is meaningfully lower and you stop adding new debt. It backfires if you stretch the tenure so far that you pay more interest overall, or if you run the cleared credit cards back up. Consolidation treats the symptom; controlling spending fixes the cause.
Smart practice
- Clear the highest-rate debt (credit cards) first; keep utilisation low afterwards.
- Keep the tenure as short as you can afford.
- Don’t close old cards immediately (it can hurt your score) but don’t overspend on them either.
FAQs
What is debt consolidation?
Combining multiple high-interest debts into one lower-interest loan with a single EMI.
Does it hurt my credit score?
Short-term it may dip from the new enquiry/loan, but on-time repayment and lower utilisation usually help over time.
When is it a bad idea?
If you stretch the tenure so far that total interest rises, or you rack the old debts back up.