Loan Calculator

The Loan Calculator helps you determine monthly payments and total interest paid on a loan. It's useful for anyone planning to take out a loan for a car, house, or personal expenses, providing a clear understanding of the financial commitment involved.

S. Siddiqui

Edited by

S. SiddiquiFounder & Editor-in-Chief
Sources:IRSFederal ReserveCFPBSECUpdated May 2026

Disclaimer: This tool is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or investment advice. Please consult a qualified financial advisor or CPA before making financial decisions.

Loan Details

$
%

Monthly Payment

$203

for 60 months

Principal

$10,000

Total Interest

$2,166

Total Cost

$12,166

82%
18%
Principal (82%)Interest (18%)

What Is the Loan Calculator?

Whether you are thinking about borrowing for a home improvement, a major purchase, or consolidating existing debt, it is important to figure out what the repayments will actually look like before you sign anything. The loan calculator works out your monthly payment, total repayment amount, and total interest charged based on the loan amount, interest rate, and term you enter. It covers any standard amortising loan, meaning one where each payment reduces both the interest and the principal.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau provides guidance on understanding loan terms and costs, and recommends that borrowers always look at the annual percentage rate (APR) rather than just the headline rate, as APR takes fees into account and gives a more accurate picture of the true cost of borrowing.

How to Use the Calculator

  1. Enter the loan amount you need.
  2. Input the annual interest rate or APR from your lender's offer.
  3. Set the loan term in months or years.
  4. The calculator immediately shows your fixed monthly payment, the total amount you will repay, and how much of that total is interest.
  5. Try different combinations to find a term and payment level that fits your budget.

For specific loan types, see also our Mortgage Calculator and Personal Loan Calculator, which are tailored to those scenarios.

The Amortisation Formula

This calculator uses the standard amortisation formula used by lenders worldwide:

Monthly Payment = P × [r(1 + r)^n] / [(1 + r)^n - 1]

Where P is the principal, r is the monthly interest rate (annual rate divided by 12), and n is the total number of payments. Each payment is fixed in size, but the split between principal and interest changes over time. Early payments are weighted heavily toward interest; later payments go mostly toward reducing the principal. This is the defining characteristic of an amortising loan.

An amortisation schedule, which the calculator can generate, shows you this breakdown payment by payment so you can see exactly how the balance reduces over time.

Loan Amount Rate (APR) Term Monthly Payment Total Interest
$10,000 8% 36 months $313.36 $1,280.96
$20,000 10% 60 months $424.94 $5,496.40
$50,000 6% 84 months $731.04 $11,407.36

Key Considerations

The interest rate and the loan term are the two main variables that determine the total cost of borrowing. A longer term keeps the monthly payment manageable but substantially increases the total interest paid. A shorter term costs more each month but gets you out of debt faster and at lower total cost. As a result, it is worth testing both ends of the range to understand the trade-off before settling on a term.

On top of that, some loans come with origination fees, early repayment charges, or other costs that are not captured by the headline interest rate. The APR, which factors in these charges, is always a more reliable figure for comparing loan products. Even so, not all lenders quote APR in the same way, so it is worth reading the small print on any offer you receive.

If you are consolidating existing debt, the key question is whether the new loan's total cost, including all fees and the interest paid over the full term, is actually lower than what you would pay by continuing with your existing arrangements. Given that, run the numbers for both scenarios before committing.

What to Do With Your Result

Once you have a monthly payment figure, compare it against your net monthly income to make sure the commitment is sustainable. Many lenders use a debt-to-income ratio of around 36% as a threshold, meaning total monthly debt payments should not exceed 36% of gross monthly income. That said, a more conservative personal target of 20 to 25% gives you more breathing room for unexpected expenses.

If the monthly payment is higher than you can comfortably afford, a longer term will reduce it, though at the cost of higher total interest. Alternatively, a larger down payment or partial upfront payment reduces the principal and therefore the monthly figure without extending the term.

Conclusion

The loan calculator is one of the most practical tools in personal finance because it translates the abstract numbers in a lending offer into a concrete monthly commitment and total cost. Taking five minutes to carry out a few calculations before you apply can prevent you from taking on more debt than you need, or at a higher cost than you should be paying.

Last reviewed: May 31, 2026
Founder's Real-World Experience
S. Siddiqui

S. Siddiqui

Founder & Editor-in-Chief, YourToolsBase

Two loan offers, same amount, and a £1,140 difference hiding in plain sight

In mid-2025 I needed a personal loan of £8,000 to cover a batch of server infrastructure upgrades for YourToolsBase. Two lenders came back with offers the same week. Lender A quoted 9.9% APR over 36 months. Lender B quoted 11.4% APR over the same term. I ran both through this calculator before getting any further into the paperwork. Lender A came back at £258 per month with a total repayment of £9,288. Lender B came back at £264 per month, just £6 more, but the total repayment worked out at £9,504. That is a difference of £216 per month in isolation meaning nothing, but £1,116 over the full term.

Given that both applications were equally straightforward to complete, the choice was clear. That said, I also checked whether Lender A had any early repayment charges, because I expected the infrastructure to pay for itself within 18 months and wanted the option to clear the balance early. It did not, which the CFPB's personal loan resource flags as one of the most commonly overlooked loan terms. I went with Lender A and cleared the balance at month 19, saving a further £156 in interest on the remaining term.

As a result, the total cost of the loan came in at around £9,100 rather than the headline £9,288, and well below what Lender B would have cost. The calculator made the decision obvious in under two minutes.

£1,116 saved over termLoan cleared at month 199.9% APR chosen over 11.4%
Also used alongside: Personal Loan Calculator

Frequently Asked Questions

What is an amortising loan?
An amortising loan is one where each payment covers both the interest charged for the period and a portion of the principal. Over the life of the loan, the outstanding balance gradually reduces to zero. Most standard personal loans, car loans, and mortgages work this way. The monthly payment stays the same throughout the term, but the proportion going toward principal versus interest shifts over time, with more going to principal in later payments.
What is the difference between interest rate and APR?
The interest rate is the annual cost of borrowing the principal, expressed as a percentage. APR, or annual percentage rate, includes the interest rate plus most fees and charges associated with the loan, expressed as a single percentage. APR gives a more accurate picture of the true cost of a loan and is the better figure to use when comparing offers from different lenders.
How does the loan term affect my total cost?
The longer the term, the lower the monthly payment, but the more total interest you pay. A $20,000 loan at 8% over 36 months costs around $2,000 in interest. The same loan over 72 months costs roughly $4,300 in interest, more than double, even though the monthly payment is much lower. Choosing the shortest term you can comfortably afford minimises the total cost.
Can I pay off a loan early?
Many loans allow early repayment, sometimes without any penalty. Paying off early reduces the outstanding principal, which means less interest accrues over the remaining term. Even making occasional extra payments can shorten the loan and reduce the total interest paid. Check your loan agreement for any early repayment charges before making additional payments.
What is a good interest rate for a personal loan?
Rates vary widely depending on your credit score, the lender, and the size of the loan. Borrowers with strong credit may qualify for rates in the 6 to 10% range, while those with lower scores may see rates of 15% or higher. It is always worth getting quotes from multiple lenders, including banks, credit unions, and online lenders, before accepting an offer.
What happens if I miss a loan payment?
Missing a payment typically triggers a late fee and may result in the missed amount being added to the outstanding balance, on which future interest then accrues. Persistent missed payments are reported to credit bureaus and can significantly damage your credit score, making future borrowing more expensive. If you are struggling to meet payments, contact your lender early as many have hardship options that are not widely advertised.

Formula

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💡 Pro Tip

Making one extra payment per year on a 30-year mortgage can cut 4–6 years off the loan. Apply extra payments directly to principal.

About the Author

S. Siddiqui

S. Siddiqui

Founder & Editor-in-Chief

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S. Siddiqui is the founder and editor-in-chief of YourToolsBase, overseeing all content, tool accuracy, and editorial standards.

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Authoritative Sources

Formulas and data in this tool are based on guidelines from the above sources.