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Switching from Credit Karma's debt features to Unburden

TL;DR

Credit Karma is free and does credit score monitoring well. The debt payoff features are basic. If you are paying down debt seriously, this guide walks through moving to a dedicated tool in ten minutes. You can keep Credit Karma on the side for the score.

Why you might be leaving Credit Karma's debt features

Free is a real advantage. Credit Karma does not ask for a credit card, and you get a VantageScore from two bureaus refreshed weekly. For millions of people, that is plenty. If debt monitoring is all you need, you are probably not reading this page.

You are reading this because the basic debt view (list of balances, rough minimum, sponsored consolidation offer at the bottom) is not enough when you are actually trying to pay debt down. Credit Karma will show you what you owe. It will not show you the month-by-month difference between snowball and avalanche, or what an extra $100 a month does to your debt-free date, or what your debt is doing to your financial vulnerability. A debt-specific tool does all of that.

Here is what you will do

Five steps. Ten minutes. Credit Karma stays open if you want credit score monitoring.

  1. Step 1 (2 min): Note your debts in Credit Karma. Open Credit Karma, go to the Debts view, and write down each debt's balance, APR, and minimum payment. Credit Karma pulls these from your credit report, so double-check against your actual statements if the numbers look off.
  2. Step 2 (1 min): Open Unburden. Go to app.unburden.money or install from Google Play. No sign-up.
  3. Step 3 (5 min): Recreate your debts. Add each debt manually in Unburden: name, balance, APR, minimum. Five debts takes about five minutes.
  4. Step 4 (1 min): Set your monthly amount. Pick the total you can commit each month. Unburden builds the snowball and avalanche plan and shows your debt-free date.
  5. Step 5 (optional, 1 min): Close Credit Karma. Most people keep the account for credit score monitoring. If you do not want it at all, go to Settings, Account Management, Close Account.

What carries over vs. what doesn't

Carries over

Doesn't carry over

Feature-by-feature comparison

FeatureUnburdenCredit Karma
Debt trackingPurpose-built: snowball, avalanche, Momentum, Burden ScoreBasic balance view pulled from credit report
Payoff strategySide-by-side snowball vs avalanche, month-by-month scheduleNo strategy comparison; some generic suggestions
Bank syncNone; privacy by designPartial; pulled from credit bureaus, not real-time
Credit scoreNot offered (Burden Score instead)VantageScore from Equifax and TransUnion, updated weekly
PriceFree up to 3 debts; Pro $6.45/mo or $149.99 lifetimeFree, monetized via offer feed

Credit Karma wins on credit score monitoring. Unburden wins on actual debt payoff planning. For free vs free, Credit Karma has the wider net; Unburden has the sharper tool for the specific job of paying debt down.

How to export your data from Credit Karma

Credit Karma does not offer a broad debt export. The fastest path is to open the Debts section in the app or on the web, and copy your balances, APRs, and minimums into a notes app or straight into Unburden. If you want your full profile data, Credit Karma provides a data-download option under Settings, Privacy & Data. Official help: support.creditkarma.com.

How to close your Credit Karma account (optional)

Most people keep Credit Karma because it is free and handles credit score monitoring. If you want to close it entirely, log in, go to Settings, then Account Management, and pick Close Account. Closing does not affect your credit score or report; Credit Karma does not furnish data to the bureaus. You can reopen later if you change your mind.

Why Unburden works for ex-Credit Karma users

Three specific reasons:

FAQ

What happens to my Credit Karma history?

Your credit report history stays with the credit bureaus, not with Credit Karma. Credit Karma only shows you that data; closing your account does not affect your credit. If you migrated from Mint, your transaction history stays accessible in Credit Karma until you close the account.

Can I import Credit Karma data into Unburden?

No automated import. Credit Karma pulls your debts from your credit report, so the balances may be slightly behind real-time. Write down current balances, APRs, and minimums from your most recent statements and enter them in Unburden.

Is Unburden cheaper if Credit Karma is free?

Unburden is free for up to three debts. Credit Karma is free but monetized via sponsored credit card and loan recommendations. If free with no referral pressure matters to you, Unburden's free tier may be the better deal even though both cost nothing out of pocket.

What if Unburden does not monitor my credit score?

It does not. Credit score monitoring is Credit Karma's core feature, and Unburden does not replicate it. Most people keep Credit Karma on the side for score updates and use Unburden for the actual debt payoff plan. The apps answer different questions.

Do I get a refund from Credit Karma?

Credit Karma is free, so no refund applies. If you paid for any Credit Karma-adjacent product (like a tax filing service or Credit Karma Money checking account), those are separate and handled through their own support flows.

Ready to switch?

Start free at app.unburden.money. No credit card, no sign-up, five minutes to your first debt-free date.

Find your Burden Score

If you landed in Credit Karma through the Mint shutdown, see switching from Mint. For a direct comparison of both free tools, start at the comparison hub.

This page is educational. It is not financial, legal, or tax advice. Interest calculations use standard amortization math at a sample APR; your actual rates, fees, and terms will vary. Figures are illustrative, not a quote. Talk to a qualified professional before making decisions about debt, credit, or insolvency.