← Back to Skills Marketplace
ethagent

Debt

by EthAgent · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0
cross-platform ⚠ suspicious
259
Downloads
0
Stars
1
Active Installs
1
Versions
Install in OpenClaw
/install debt
Description
A relentless AI agent skill for destroying personal debt permanently. Maps every dollar you owe into a single battlefield view, builds a payoff strategy cali...
README (SKILL.md)

Debt

The Weight

You know the feeling. It is there when you wake up. Not always at the front of your mind, but always present. A background hum of financial anxiety that colors every decision you make. Can I afford this? Should I put it on the card? What if something breaks this month? When will this end?

Debt is not just a financial condition. It is a psychological one. Studies consistently show that debt is one of the strongest predictors of anxiety and depression, stronger than income level, stronger than employment status. People with high debt and high income report worse mental health than people with low debt and low income. The weight is not proportional to the number. The weight is the feeling of being trapped.

This skill exists because you deserve to put that weight down. Not gradually. Not "someday." On a specific date that you can see on a calendar. A date that gets closer every single month.


The Battlefield Map

Before you can win a war, you need to see the entire battlefield. Most people in debt have a fragmented picture. They know roughly what they owe on each credit card. They have a vague sense of their student loan balance. They know the mortgage payment but not the remaining principal. The medical bill from last year exists somewhere in a drawer.

This fragmentation is not laziness. It is self-protection. The brain avoids assembling the complete picture because the complete picture is painful. But the incomplete picture is far more dangerous, because it prevents strategy. You cannot optimize what you cannot see.

The skill builds your complete debt map. Every creditor, every balance, every interest rate, every minimum payment, every due date. Credit cards. Student loans. Car loans. Personal loans. Medical bills. Buy-now-pay-later accounts. Money owed to family members. Everything.

Then it shows you the number. The total. The real total, not the comfortable partial total you have been carrying in your head. This moment is hard. It is also the moment everything changes, because for the first time you are looking at a defined problem rather than an undefined fear.


Two Strategies, One Goal

There are two mathematically sound approaches to paying off multiple debts, and the right one depends on who you are as much as what you owe.

The Avalanche targets the debt with the highest interest rate first. You make minimum payments on everything else and throw every spare dollar at the most expensive debt until it is gone. Then you redirect that payment to the next highest rate. Repeat until zero.

This is the mathematically optimal strategy. It minimizes the total interest you pay over the life of your debt. For a person who is motivated by efficiency and can sustain effort without frequent rewards, the avalanche is the right choice.

The Snowball targets the debt with the smallest balance first, regardless of interest rate. You eliminate the smallest debt as fast as possible, experience the psychological reward of a debt disappearing completely, and use that momentum to attack the next smallest balance.

This is the psychologically optimal strategy. It maximizes the frequency of wins. For a person who needs to see progress to stay motivated, who has tried and failed to stick to a payoff plan before, the snowball is the right choice. The additional interest cost compared to the avalanche is typically small. The difference in completion rate is enormous.

The skill helps you choose. It runs both scenarios with your actual numbers and shows you exactly what each strategy costs in total interest and how long each takes. Then it recommends the one that fits your personality, your history, and your financial situation. And if you change your mind halfway through, it recalculates without judgment.


Finding Money You Did Not Know You Had

The most common objection to any debt payoff plan is: "I do not have any extra money to put toward debt." And in many cases this feels completely true. The bills consume everything. There is nothing left.

The skill challenges this assumption respectfully but persistently. It walks through your actual spending patterns and identifies specific, concrete opportunities. Not vague suggestions to "eat out less." Specific discoveries: the streaming service you use once a month, the insurance policy you have not comparison-shopped in three years, the gym membership you have not used since February, the subscription that auto-renewed and you forgot about.

It also identifies income opportunities you may not have considered. Selling items you no longer use. Requesting a rate reduction on your credit cards. Qualifying for income-driven repayment on student loans. Consolidation options that reduce your effective interest rate.

None of these individually are life-changing amounts. Together, they can mean an extra two hundred or five hundred dollars per month directed at debt. Over the life of a payoff plan, that is the difference between freedom in three years and freedom in seven.


Negotiating With Creditors

Most people do not know that credit card interest rates are negotiable. That medical bills can often be reduced by thirty to fifty percent simply by calling and asking. That collection agencies will frequently settle for a fraction of the original amount if you negotiate from a position of knowledge.

The skill provides specific scripts for each type of negotiation. What to say when you call your credit card company to request a lower rate. How to approach a medical billing department about a reduction. When to negotiate with a collection agency and when to request debt validation first. What to put in writing and what to handle verbally.

These are not aggressive tactics. They are professional, factual conversations that work because creditors would rather receive reduced payment than no payment, and because most consumers never ask.


Watching the Number Shrink

The skill tracks every payment you make against the plan. It updates your total balance, your projected payoff date, and the amount of interest you have saved by staying on track.

It celebrates milestones because milestones matter. Your first debt eliminated. Your halfway point. Every thousand dollars of progress. The moment your total debt drops below a psychologically significant threshold.

It also catches slips early. If you miss a payment or add new debt, the plan adjusts. No shame. No lectures. Just a recalculation and a new path forward. The goal does not change. The timeline adapts.


The Credit Score Dimension

Paying off debt improves your credit score, but the relationship between the two is not always intuitive. Closing a credit card after paying it off can temporarily lower your score. The order in which you pay off different types of debt affects your score differently. Your credit utilization ratio matters more than your total balance in some scoring models.

The skill tracks how your payoff strategy affects your credit score and suggests adjustments that optimize for both debt elimination and credit improvement simultaneously. When the two goals conflict, it explains the tradeoff clearly and lets you decide.


The Finish Line

There will be a day when you make the last payment. When the total reads zero. When the background hum goes silent.

The skill prepares you for that day and for what comes after. How to redirect the money you were putting toward debt into savings and investment so the cycle does not repeat. How to build the emergency fund that prevents future debt from accumulating. How to use your improved credit score wisely rather than as an invitation to borrow again.

Freedom from debt is not just a financial milestone. It is the removal of a weight that affected how you thought, how you slept, and how you felt about the future. The skill exists to get you there as fast as mathematically and psychologically possible.

Usage Guidance
This skill's goals (mapping debt, negotiating, tracking payments) are plausible, but the instructions are ambiguous about how it will obtain and handle sensitive financial data. Before installing or using it, ask the publisher: (1) exactly how will the skill obtain your debt/account data — will you paste statements, link accounts via a trusted aggregator (e.g., Plaid), or provide login credentials? (2) Will the skill ever store your data externally, and if so where and for how long? (3) Will it contact creditors or third parties on your behalf (calls, emails, letters)? If so, what contact methods and what content will be sent? (4) Does the skill require SSNs, full bank logins, or full card numbers? (Avoid sharing these — prefer redacted statements, last 4 digits, or read-only tokenized access.) (5) How can you revoke access and delete stored data? If the publisher cannot answer these clearly, do not provide passwords, full card numbers, or Social Security numbers; instead provide redacted statements or manually run the plan yourself. Prefer solutions that use audited, read-only bank connectors or local/manual input. Because the SKILL.md is instruction-only and source/homepage are unknown, treat this as potentially risky until the data flows and retention policies are explicit.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: debt Version: 1.0.0 The skill bundle consists of a metadata file and a descriptive markdown document (skill.md) outlining a debt management assistant. The content is purely instructional and motivational, detailing financial strategies like the 'Avalanche' and 'Snowball' methods, negotiation tactics, and credit score tracking. There is no executable code, no evidence of data exfiltration, and no malicious prompt injection designed to compromise the agent or the host system.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
Name and description match the instructions' high-level goals: build a complete debt map, run payoff scenarios, find savings, and negotiate with creditors. Those capabilities legitimately require collecting detailed financial information and communicating with third parties, so the overall purpose aligns with the described operations.
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md is instruction-only and describes actions that imply collecting sensitive data (balances, interest rates, bills, payment history) and negotiating with creditors. The file does not declare how the agent should obtain that data (user-provided, read from local files, or fetched via APIs), nor whether it will contact creditors on the user's behalf or transmit data externally. Because the runtime instructions (as provided) are high-level and truncated, it's unclear whether the agent is permitted or instructed to read unrelated files, request account credentials, access email/phone, or call external services — these are plausible next steps given the task and should be explicitly documented.
Install Mechanism
No install spec and no code files — lowest-risk delivery model. Nothing is written to disk by the skill itself. That is consistent with an instruction-only skill, but it also means runtime behavior depends entirely on the agent following the prose, so the instructions must be scrutinized for data-handling steps.
Credentials
The skill declares no required environment variables or credentials, which is proportionate on paper. However, the described functionality (mapping debts, negotiating, tracking payments) commonly requires access to account data or external APIs. The absence of declared credentials could mean the skill expects users to paste sensitive data into the conversation (risky), or it may rely on the agent's existing integrations (also risky). The SKILL.md does not clarify what specific secrets the agent will request or how they will be used/stored.
Persistence & Privilege
always is false and the skill is user-invocable with autonomous invocation allowed (platform default). The skill does not request persistent installation privileges or claim to modify other skills. No red flags on privilege escalation from metadata alone.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install debt
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /debt
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Initial release
Metadata
Slug debt
Version 1.0.0
License
All-time Installs 1
Active Installs 1
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Debt?

A relentless AI agent skill for destroying personal debt permanently. Maps every dollar you owe into a single battlefield view, builds a payoff strategy cali... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 259 downloads so far.

How do I install Debt?

Run "/install debt" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Debt free?

Yes, Debt is completely free (open-source). You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Debt support?

Debt is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Debt?

It is built and maintained by EthAgent (@ethagent); the current version is v1.0.0.

💬 Comments