Free Calculator

Loan Calculator

Estimate the monthly payment, total interest, and amortization schedule on any fixed-rate personal, auto, or business loan. Results update instantly as you type.

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% APR
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Monthly Payment
$0
Total Paid
$0
Total Interest
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Principal
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Interest
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Show first 12 months of amortization
MonthPaymentPrincipalInterestBalance

How the Loan Calculator Works

This calculator solves the standard fixed-rate amortizing loan formula. You enter three numbers - the loan amount, the annual interest rate, and the term in years - and the calculator returns the fixed monthly payment that pays off the loan in equal installments over that term.

The math behind the result

The formula is M = P[r(1+r)^n] / [(1+r)^n - 1]. P is the principal, r is the monthly interest rate (the APR divided by 12), and n is the total number of monthly payments. For a $25,000 loan at 7.5% APR over 5 years, that works out to about $501 a month and roughly $5,070 in total interest paid.

Use the amortization schedule

The amortization schedule shows you, month by month, how each payment splits between principal and interest. Early in the loan, almost every dollar goes to interest. By the final year, almost every dollar goes to principal. This is why extra payments early in a loan save much more than extra payments at the end.

When this calculator is the right tool

Use it for personal loans, auto loans, business term loans, and student loans. For mortgages, use the Mortgage Calculator since it includes property tax, insurance, and PMI. For credit card payoff with variable balances, the Debt Payoff Calculator handles it better.

How to lower your monthly payment

Three levers move the monthly payment: a lower interest rate, a longer term, or a smaller principal. Lowering the rate is almost always the cheapest of the three. Stretching the term lowers the payment but increases total interest. Reducing the principal means a smaller loan.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I calculate my monthly loan payment?
Use the formula M = P[r(1+r)^n] / [(1+r)^n - 1], where P is the loan amount, r is the monthly interest rate (APR divided by 12), and n is the total number of monthly payments. Our calculator does this automatically as you type.
What is a good interest rate for a personal loan?
In 2025, personal loan APRs typically range from 7% to 36%. Borrowers with credit scores above 740 usually qualify for rates under 12%. Below 670, expect rates above 18%.
Does paying extra reduce interest?
Yes. Any extra payment goes directly to principal, which reduces the balance interest is calculated on. Even small extra payments early in a loan can save thousands over the term.
What is the difference between APR and interest rate?
The interest rate is what you pay on the principal. APR (Annual Percentage Rate) includes the interest rate plus most lender fees, so it gives you the true total cost of the loan.
How does loan term affect total cost?
Longer terms lower the monthly payment but increase total interest paid. A 7-year auto loan can cost twice as much interest as a 5-year loan on the same vehicle.

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