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Loan Calculator

A general-purpose loan calculator. Works for car loans, personal loans, and student loans. See monthly payment, total interest, and a payment-over-time chart.

For general information only. This tool produces estimates, not financial, tax, or investment advice. Figures can change and can't account for your full situation, so confirm anything important with a qualified financial professional, lender, or accountant. See our full disclaimer.

Monthly payment
$404.57
$4,274.28
Total interest
$24,274.28
Total paid
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How to use Loan Calculator

  1. Enter the loan amount, annual interest rate, and term in years.
  2. See your monthly payment plus total interest and total cost.

Loan calculator: a complete guide

Whether you call it a loan calculator, an EMI calculator, or a monthly payment calculator, the underlying math is identical: given a principal, an interest rate, and a term, what does the fixed monthly instalment work out to? Our calculator handles any fixed-rate amortising loan — car, personal, student, business, education, or wedding loans — and runs the formula instantly in your browser.

The EMI / monthly payment formula

Reducing-balance amortisation uses the same equation worldwide:

EMI = P × r × (1 + r)^n / ((1 + r)^n − 1)

Where:
P = loan principal
r = monthly interest rate (annual rate ÷ 12)
n = number of monthly instalments (years × 12)

Example: a $20,000 car loan at 8% for 5 years. r = 0.006667, n = 60. EMI works out to $405.53. Over 60 months you pay $24,332 — $4,332 of which is interest.

Flat rate vs reducing balance — the trick that costs you money

This is the single biggest source of confusion in personal lending. A quoted flat rate of 8% can be equivalent to a 14–15% reducing-balance rate. Always confirm which method the lender uses, and convert to the effective annual rate to compare offers honestly.

  • Reducing balance: interest is calculated each month on the outstanding principal. Because the principal falls every month, the interest portion of each payment falls too. Most mortgages, modern car loans, and reputable personal loans use this method.
  • Flat rate: interest is calculated up front on the original principal, then distributed evenly across all instalments. Used by some second-tier consumer lenders, car dealerships in certain markets, and Buy Now Pay Later programmes. The quoted rate looks low but the effective annual rate is roughly 1.8–1.9× higher.

Total cost matters more than monthly payment

Lenders compete on the monthly payment because it is the easiest number to understand. But a low monthly payment hides the total cost. A $15,000 loan at 9% over 3 years costs $2,167 in interest; the same loan stretched to 7 years costs $5,167 in interest — almost 2.4× as much for an extra 4 years of borrowing.

Before you sign, always look at three numbers together: monthly payment, total interest, and total cost. The calculator above shows all three so you can compare apples to apples.

Typical interest rates by loan type (2026)

  • Mortgage (US, 30-year fixed): 6.0%–7.5% depending on credit and points.
  • Auto loan (new car, 60-month): 6.5%–9% for prime borrowers; 12–18% for subprime.
  • Personal loan (unsecured): 7%–25% depending on credit score and lender.
  • Student loan (US federal): 5.5%–8.05% for current academic year.
  • Credit card: 18%–29% — never carry a balance you can refinance into a personal loan.

Should you take a longer or shorter loan?

The trade-off is identical to mortgages: longer term = lower monthly payment but more total interest. The discipline is to take the shortest term whose monthly payment fits comfortably inside your budget — "comfortably" meaning you still have room to save 15% of income for retirement and maintain a 3–6 month emergency fund. If a 3-year auto loan blows up your budget but a 5-year doesn't, the right answer might be a cheaper car, not a longer loan.

Prepayment: when it makes sense

Most modern loans let you pay extra principal at any time without penalty. Each extra dollar of principal saves you the future interest that dollar would have accrued. On a 9% loan with 3 years remaining, an extra $1,000 payment today saves roughly $146 in interest over those 3 years — a guaranteed 4.9% annualised return, after tax, with zero risk.

Before prepaying, do two things: (1) confirm there is no prepayment penalty, and (2) make sure you have an emergency fund. Paying down a loan ahead of building a 3-month emergency fund means a single bad month forces you to put expenses on a 22% credit card — wiping out years of savings on the original loan.

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Frequently asked questions

What kinds of loans does this work for?
Any fixed-rate amortizing loan: car loans, personal loans, student loans, and small-business loans. The math is identical — only the typical terms and rates differ.
Does APR matter here?
The "rate" you enter should be the APR you would be quoted — it already includes most fees. The formula is the standard amortization formula.
Why does the same loan cost more on longer terms?
Lower monthly payments mean more interest paid over more years. Shorter terms cost much less in interest but stretch the monthly budget more.
What is EMI?
Equated Monthly Instalment — the fixed payment you make every month for the life of the loan. EMI is the term used in India, Pakistan and many other markets; in the US it is simply called the monthly payment. The formula is identical.
What is the difference between flat-rate and reducing-balance interest?
Reducing-balance interest (used in this calculator) charges interest only on the outstanding principal, which shrinks every month. Flat-rate interest charges the same rate on the original principal for the whole term, making the effective rate nearly 2× higher than the quoted rate. Always confirm which method your lender uses.
Can I pay off a loan early?
Usually yes, but some loans have prepayment penalties — especially mortgages and auto loans in certain regions. Read the loan contract for "prepayment penalty" or "early settlement fee" before paying ahead.
What credit score do I need?
Personal loan rates vary dramatically by credit score. In the US, scores above 740 typically get the best rates; 670–740 is good; below 670 means significantly higher rates or denial. Check your free credit report before applying so there are no surprises.

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