Loan Payment Calculator

Calculate your monthly loan payment, total cost, and total interest for auto loans, personal loans, student loans, or any fixed-rate installment loan.

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Total Interest
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How to Calculate Your Monthly Loan Payment

Whether you're financing a car, consolidating debt, or funding a major purchase, knowing your monthly payment before you sign anything is critical. Our loan payment calculator uses the standard amortization formula to give you accurate estimates for any type of installment loan.

Just enter the loan amount, annual interest rate, and loan term in months or years. The calculator will show your monthly payment, total interest paid, and a complete breakdown of how each payment splits between principal and interest over time.

Common Loan Types and Typical Rates in 2026

Interest rates vary dramatically depending on the type of loan, your credit score, and whether the loan is secured or unsecured:

Loan Type Typical APR Common Term
New Auto Loan5.5% – 9.0%48–72 months
Used Auto Loan7.0% – 12.0%48–60 months
Personal Loan (Good Credit)8.0% – 15.0%12–60 months
Personal Loan (Fair Credit)15.0% – 25.0%12–36 months
Student Loan (Federal)5.5% – 7.5%10–25 years

The Total Cost of Borrowing: It's More Than the Sticker Price

Many people focus on the monthly payment and ignore the total cost. Here's why that matters — a $25,000 car loan at 8% for 72 months has a monthly payment of $438, which feels manageable. But you'll pay a total of $31,536 — that's $6,536 in interest on top of the $25,000 you borrowed.

Shorter loan terms mean higher monthly payments but significantly less interest. Use the calculator to compare different terms side by side before committing.

Amortization: How Your Payments Change Over Time

In the early months of a loan, most of your payment goes toward interest. As you pay down the principal balance, the interest portion shrinks and more of your payment goes toward principal. This is called amortization.

For a $30,000 personal loan at 10% over 5 years, your first payment breaks down roughly as $250 interest / $395 principal. By the final year, it flips to about $35 interest / $610 principal.

Understanding amortization helps you see the impact of extra payments. Because early payments are interest-heavy, making extra payments in the first years of a loan saves you far more than making them later.

5 Ways to Get a Lower Interest Rate

💡 Watch Out for Prepayment Penalties

Some loans charge a fee if you pay them off early, which can wipe out the interest savings from extra payments. Always check the loan agreement for prepayment penalty clauses before signing. Federal student loans and most auto loans don't have them, but some personal loans and subprime auto loans do. Use our Debt Payoff Calculator to model your repayment strategy.

Reviewed by the Wealth Growth Financial Review Board. Last updated June 2026. This calculator provides estimates only — actual loan terms vary by lender and credit profile.

Frequently Asked Questions

This calculator works for any fixed-rate installment loan including auto loans, personal loans, student loans, and debt consolidation loans. It's not designed for variable-rate loans or revolving credit like credit cards.
You can reduce total interest by choosing a shorter loan term, making extra payments, improving your credit score to qualify for lower rates, or refinancing when rates drop. Even small extra payments toward principal can save thousands over the life of the loan.
The interest rate is the cost of borrowing the principal. The Annual Percentage Rate (APR) includes the interest rate plus fees and other charges, giving you the true cost of the loan. APR is always equal to or higher than the interest rate.
Paying off a loan early saves on interest, but check for prepayment penalties first. Also consider whether your money could earn more through investments. If your loan rate is 5% and you can earn 7% investing, it may be better to invest the extra money.