It honestly depends on your discipline, but it saved my sanity.
I totally get where you're coming from. That feeling of running in place while the interest eats your payments alive is the absolute worst. To answer your main question: Yes, you are technically just moving money around, but the "worth it" part comes down to the interest rate.
Think of it this way: if your credit cards are at 24% APR and you get a consolidation loan at 10% or 12%, you aren't just moving money; you’re stopping the bleeding. That extra 12% you aren’t paying in interest every month actually goes toward your balance instead of the bank's pocket. Here’s a few things I learned when I went through this myself:
- Watch out for origination fees: Some of those companies you see in ads charge a fee just to give you the loan (usually 3% to 6% of the total). If your debt is $18k, a 5% fee is $900 added right back onto your debt. Always look for "no origination fee" loans, especially through local credit unions.
- The "Credit Card Trap": This is the biggest danger. Once you pay off those four cards with the loan, they’ll all show a $0 balance. It is incredibly tempting to start using them again for "just one thing." If you do that, you'll end up with an $18k loan AND new credit card debt. I actually froze my cards in a block of ice in the freezer so I wouldn't touch them.
- Your credit score will likely dip, then jump: When you apply, there’s a hard inquiry that might drop your score a few points. However, once those credit cards show as paid off, your "credit utilization" drops significantly, which usually gives your score a massive boost within a month or two.
Should you just stick to the Snowball Method?
The Debt Snowball is great if you need the psychological win of paying off a small card first to stay motivated. But with $18k, if your rates are all in the mid-20s, you're paying a huge "stress tax" in interest.
If I were in your shoes, I’d look for a Fixed-Rate Personal Loan or a Balance Transfer Card (if your credit is still decent enough to qualify for a 0% intro period). A balance transfer is usually cheaper than a loan because there's no interest for 12-18 months, though there’s usually a 3% transfer fee.
Practical tip: Before you sign anything, use an online debt calculator to see exactly how much you'll save. If a loan cuts your monthly "interest cost" by half, it’s usually worth the move. Just make sure you address the spending habits that got the cards up to $18k in the first place, or you'll be back in the same spot in two years. You've got this!