The Cash Flow Index (CFI) is a debt-ranking formula: divide your loan balance by its monthly payment. The result tells you how much cash flow each debt traps per dollar of balance. A $20,000 equipment loan at $500/month scores 40. A $300,000 mortgage at $1,800/month scores 167. The equipment loan is strangling five times more cash per dollar than the mortgage. If you run a business, that distinction changes which debt you attack first and why.
Last reviewed: March 14, 2026.
- CFI = balance / monthly payment. Lower scores trap more cash flow per dollar of balance.
- Scores below 50: pay off or restructure first. Scores 50 to 100: evaluate refinancing. Scores above 100: keep and make minimum payments.
- For business owners, cash flow efficiency often matters more than interest rate because monthly margin funds payroll, inventory, and opportunities.
- CFI does not replace interest rate analysis. It adds a second lens that standard advice ignores.
If your monthly margin is tight and you need breathing room to operate, start with the debt that scores lowest.
- Business owners carrying equipment loans, lines of credit, and SBA debt alongside personal mortgages and car payments.
- Households earning $150K to $2M with multiple debt types across personal and business entities.
- Anyone who has been told to pay highest interest first but feels like their monthly margin never improves.
- You have three or more active debts and are unsure which to attack first.
- Your monthly debt payments total more than 30% of gross income and cash feels tight.
- You have considered refinancing but are unsure which debts are worth the effort.
If two or more apply, the Cash Flow Index gives you a ranking system that goes beyond interest rates.
Cash Flow Index = Loan Balance / Monthly Payment
That is the entire calculation. Two numbers per debt, one division. The result is a score that measures how much balance you carry per dollar of monthly payment. A low score means you are paying a lot each month relative to the remaining balance. A high score means the monthly payment is small relative to what you owe.
The key insight: low-scoring debts eat up outsized monthly cash flow. Eliminating them frees the most breathing room per dollar spent.
| CFI Score | Zone | Action |
|---|
| Below 50 | Restructure or pay off | This debt is cash-flow-inefficient. Every dollar of balance costs you an outsized slice of monthly payment. Target it first. |
| 50 to 100 | Evaluate | This debt is moderately inefficient. Consider refinancing to lower the payment, extending the term, or consolidating. If refinancing is not possible, it becomes the next payoff target after sub-50 debts. |
| Above 100 | Keep and make minimums | This debt is cash-flow-efficient. The monthly payment is small relative to the balance. Make minimum payments and direct surplus cash toward lower-scoring debts. |
These thresholds are guidelines, not hard rules. A CFI of 48 and a CFI of 52 are functionally similar. Use the zones directionally, not as binary cutoffs.
Three methods. Three different priorities. Understanding when each one wins is more useful than picking a permanent favorite.
| Method | Ranks debt by | Optimizes for | Best when |
|---|
| Debt snowball | Smallest balance first | Psychological momentum (quick wins) | You need motivation and have trouble sticking with a plan |
| Debt avalanche | Highest interest rate first | Total interest paid (lowest overall cost) | One debt has a significantly higher rate than the others |
| Cash Flow Index | Lowest CFI score first | Monthly cash flow freed per dollar spent | You need operating margin and your rates are clustered within a few points |
The common objection to CFI: "You might pay more total interest." This is true. Comparisons show the difference is typically small. Undebt.it ran a four-debt scenario and found CFI cost about $2,000 more in total interest over 144 months compared to the avalanche method's 143 months. That is roughly $14/month in extra interest cost.
For a W-2 employee with stable income and no cash flow constraints, $14/month matters and the avalanche wins on pure math. For a business owner who needs $400/month of freed cash flow to cover a seasonal payroll gap, the CFI payoff order can prevent a high-interest emergency loan that costs far more than $14/month.
The math changes when you factor in what freed cash flow prevents.
Standard advice says pay the highest interest rate first. That advice makes two assumptions: your income is stable and your only goal is minimizing total interest cost. For W-2 employees with one mortgage and one car payment, both assumptions usually hold. For business owners juggling equipment loans, a line of credit, and quarterly estimated taxes, neither does.
CFI wins when:
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Cash flow is your operating constraint. If you run a business, monthly margin is not discretionary. It funds payroll, inventory, quarterly estimated taxes, and opportunities. A freed $500/month from eliminating a low-CFI equipment loan might prevent a $10,000 line of credit draw at 12%.
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Your interest rates are clustered. When your debts range from 4% to 7%, the avalanche method barely moves the needle. The rate difference is small. The cash flow difference between a CFI-25 equipment loan and a CFI-165 mortgage is massive.
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You have seasonal or variable income. Business owners with uneven revenue need monthly margin more than they need interest optimization. A lean quarter with freed cash flow is manageable. A lean quarter with every dollar locked into debt payments creates emergency borrowing.
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You are evaluating refinancing decisions. CFI gives you a target: move the score above 50 through refinancing (lower payment, longer term). If a refinance moves a debt from CFI 35 to CFI 80, that specific debt becomes less urgent and your payoff priority shifts.
None of this means CFI is always right. It is not.
Interest rate wins when:
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One debt is significantly more expensive. A 22% credit card next to 5% auto loans and a 4% mortgage is not a close call. Pay the credit card first regardless of CFI.
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You have stable, predictable income. W-2 employees with no business cash flow constraints can optimize purely for cost.
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You are already comfortable with your monthly margin. If freed cash flow does not change your behavior or options, minimize total interest.
This is where CFI earns its value. Consider a business owner with three debts:
| Debt | Balance | Monthly Payment | Interest Rate | CFI Score |
|---|
| Equipment loan | $18,000 | $600 | 6.5% | 30 |
| Business line of credit | $35,000 | $500 | 8.0% | 70 |
| Primary mortgage | $280,000 | $1,700 | 4.5% | 165 |
Avalanche method says: Pay the line of credit first (8.0% rate). Then equipment loan (6.5%). Then mortgage (4.5%).
CFI method says: Pay the equipment loan first (CFI 30). Then line of credit (CFI 70). Then mortgage (CFI 165).
The CFI order frees $600/month after eliminating the equipment loan. That $600 can cover a slow month's payroll shortfall, fund quarterly estimated taxes, or accelerate payoff of the line of credit. The avalanche order would have you paying $500/month toward the $35,000 line of credit first, which takes longer to eliminate and frees less monthly cash when it does.
For a business owner who occasionally draws on that line of credit during lean months, eliminating the equipment loan first reduces the chance of needing the line of credit at all.
Business owners with S-corps, rental properties, and personal debt face a version of this problem that standard personal finance advice never addresses.
| Debt | Entity | Balance | Monthly Payment | Rate | CFI | Tax-Deductible? |
|---|
| Equipment loan | S-corp | $22,000 | $550 | 6.0% | 40 | Yes (business expense) |
| Credit card | Personal | $8,500 | $250 | 21.0% | 34 | No |
| Auto loan | Personal | $28,000 | $480 | 5.5% | 58 | No |
| Rental mortgage | LLC | $185,000 | $1,200 | 5.0% | 154 | Yes (interest deduction) |
| Primary mortgage | Personal | $320,000 | $1,900 | 4.2% | 168 | Partially (SALT limits) |
Pure CFI says: credit card first (34), then equipment loan (40), then auto loan (58). But the credit card is also at 21% interest, so both CFI and avalanche agree. That is the easy call.
The interesting decision is between the equipment loan (CFI 40, 6%, tax-deductible) and the auto loan (CFI 58, 5.5%, not deductible). The CFI says equipment loan first. But the equipment loan interest is a business deduction. After tax benefit, the effective rate might be closer to 4.5%. The auto loan interest is not deductible.
This is where CFI needs a tax-adjusted overlay. The formula does not account for deductibility. A business owner working with a CPA would weigh the after-tax cost against the cash flow freed.
Decision framework for multi-entity debt:
- Calculate CFI for every debt across all entities.
- Flag debts with tax-deductible interest.
- For deductible debts, compare the after-tax effective rate against non-deductible debts.
- If the after-tax rate flips the priority order, discuss with your CPA before committing.
- If rates are close after adjustment, default to CFI order (cash flow freed is the tiebreaker).
Step 1: List every debt. Include personal, business, and rental. For each, write the current balance and minimum monthly payment.
Step 2: Divide balance by payment. That is the CFI.
Step 3: Sort lowest to highest. The bottom of the list is your target.
Step 4: Note the interest rate and whether the interest is tax-deductible. This is your overlay data for edge cases.
Step 5: Run the Cash Flow Index Calculator to see the scores ranked and zoned automatically.
If you prefer a spreadsheet, three columns are enough: Debt Name, Balance, Monthly Payment. Add a fourth column with the formula =B2/C2 and sort ascending.
For each debt, follow this sequence:
CFI below 50:
- Priority consideration: pay off as soon as possible.
- Direct all surplus cash toward this debt while making minimums on everything else.
- If you cannot pay it off within 12 months, explore refinancing to reduce the monthly payment and move the CFI above 50.
CFI 50 to 100:
- Evaluate whether refinancing, extending the term, or consolidating improves the score.
- If refinancing moves the CFI above 100, the debt becomes low-priority and you redirect cash to the next sub-50 debt.
- If no refinancing option exists, this becomes your next target after sub-50 debts are cleared.
CFI above 100:
- Make minimum payments only.
- Do not accelerate payoff unless you have eliminated all lower-scoring debts and have surplus cash with no better use.
- Mortgages and long-term fixed-rate debt typically live here.
Eliminating a $600/month equipment loan does not just "save" $600. It creates optionality.
That $600/month can:
- Cover a lean month without drawing on a credit line (avoiding 8-12% interest on the draw).
- Fund quarterly estimated taxes without disrupting operating cash (avoiding underpayment penalties at 8% annualized).
- Accelerate payoff of the next debt (the freed payment rolls into the next target, creating the cascade effect).
- Build a business emergency reserve (3 months of fixed costs).
- Fund a growth investment that generates revenue (the math shifts from cost avoidance to return generation).
This is why cash flow, not net worth, is the operating metric for household wealth. Net worth measures what you own minus what you owe. Cash flow measures what you can do this month.
Mistake 1: Ignoring a 20%+ interest debt because its CFI is high.
If a credit card has a $15,000 balance and a $200/month minimum (CFI 75), the CFI says "evaluate zone." But at 22% interest, this debt is generating $275/month in interest charges. The rate should override the CFI here. Always check: is any debt above 15% interest? If yes, pay it first regardless of CFI.
Mistake 2: Paying off a tax-deductible debt before a non-deductible one at a similar rate.
A business equipment loan at 6% with full interest deductibility has an effective after-tax cost of roughly 4.5% (assuming a 25% marginal tax rate). A personal auto loan at 5.5% with no deduction costs the full 5.5%. The tax overlay can flip the payoff order.
Mistake 3: Never recalculating.
CFI scores change as balances decrease. A debt that started at CFI 45 might be at CFI 30 after 12 months of payments (the balance dropped but the payment stayed the same). Recalculate quarterly.
Mistake 4: Treating CFI as the only metric.
CFI is one lens. Interest rate is another. Tax treatment is a third. Emotional weight is a fourth. The value of CFI is adding a lens that standard advice ignores, not replacing all other lenses.
Debt payoff is one part of a larger system. For households with multiple entities, multiple advisors, and planning complexity, the Cash Flow Index fits into a broader operating framework:
- Cash flow is the operating metric. Net worth is the scoreboard. Cash flow is the game. The CFI helps you manage the game by freeing monthly capacity.
- Freed cash flow funds the next play. After eliminating a low-CFI debt, the freed payment can fund a Roth conversion, max a retirement contribution, or build an emergency reserve. These are the plays that compound.
- Debt decisions affect multiple entities. A business owner's S-corp equipment loan and personal mortgage are connected through the same household cash flow. Managing them together, not in silos, is the multi-entity coordination challenge.
- Advisor coordination improves with data. Showing your CPA and financial advisor a ranked CFI table with tax overlays is more productive than asking "which debt should I pay off?" The data creates a better conversation.
- Have I calculated the CFI for every active debt (personal and business)?
- Are any debts above 15% interest? If yes, those likely come first regardless of CFI.
- Are any debts tax-deductible? If yes, what is the effective after-tax rate?
- If I eliminate my lowest-CFI debt, what would I do with the freed monthly payment?
- Am I carrying an emergency reserve (3 months of fixed costs) before accelerating payoff?
- Which of my debts has tax-deductible interest, and what is the effective after-tax cost?
- If I refinance [specific debt], what payment and term would move the CFI above 50?
- Should I split my payoff plan: CFI order for cash-flow-constrained debts, rate order for high-interest outliers?
- Does accelerating payoff on [specific debt] affect any business deductions or entity structure?
- This week: List every debt with balance and payment. Calculate the CFI. Sort lowest to highest. Takes 15 minutes.
- Within 14 days: For any debt with CFI below 50, call your lender to ask about refinancing options. If the payment drops enough to move the CFI above 50, the debt becomes lower priority.
- By day 30: Set up your payoff plan targeting the lowest-CFI debt. Redirect any surplus cash. If you have a CPA, share the CFI table and ask about tax-deductible interest overlays.
Run your debts through the Cash Flow Index Calculator to see
scores ranked and zoned automatically. If you manage multiple entities and want a
coordinated payoff plan that accounts for tax treatment across personal and business debt,
the Cash Flow Analyzer builds a prioritized plan.
This guide is for planning and coordination only. It does not provide financial,
tax, or legal advice. The Cash Flow Index is an evaluation framework, not a directive.
Confirm decisions and implementation timing with a qualified financial advisor or CPA.