Loan Calculator - Mortgage, Auto & Personal Loans

Calculate monthly payments, total interest, and amortization schedule for any loan

Calculate Your Loan Payments

Mortgage
Auto Loan
Personal Loan
Student Loan
Business Loan
Custom
Loan Amount:
$250,000
Interest Rate (APR):
6.5%
Loan Term:
30 years
Down Payment:
20%
Payment Frequency:
Include Additional Costs:
Property Tax & Insurance
Extra Monthly Payment: $
How This Calculator Works: Enter your loan details to calculate monthly payments, total interest paid, and see a complete amortization schedule. The calculator uses standard loan formulas to determine how much of each payment goes to principal vs interest. You can compare different loan terms, make extra payments, and see how it affects your total cost and payoff timeline.

Current Average Loan Rates

Loan Type Average Rate Typical Term Average Loan Amount Monthly Payment
30-Year Fixed Mortgage 6.5% - 7.5% 30 years $350,000 $2,212 - $2,447
15-Year Fixed Mortgage 5.8% - 6.8% 15 years $250,000 $2,088 - $2,230
Auto Loan (New Car) 4.5% - 9.0% 5-6 years $35,000 $650 - $740
Auto Loan (Used Car) 6.0% - 12.0% 4-5 years $25,000 $550 - $690
Personal Loan (Good Credit) 8.0% - 15.0% 3-5 years $15,000 $300 - $365
Personal Loan (Fair Credit) 15.0% - 30.0% 3-5 years $10,000 $350 - $450
Federal Student Loan 4.0% - 7.0% 10-25 years $30,000 $300 - $350
Private Student Loan 5.0% - 12.0% 10-20 years $40,000 $425 - $440
Business Loan 6.0% - 15.0% 5-10 years $100,000 $1,150 - $1,660
Home Equity Loan 7.0% - 9.0% 10-15 years $50,000 $580 - $700

Types of Loans Explained

Mortgage Loans

Purpose: Purchase or refinance real estate. Types: Fixed-rate (rate stays same), Adjustable-rate (ARM - rate changes), FHA (government-backed), VA (for veterans), Jumbo (over conforming limits). Key Features: Long terms (15-30 years), secured by property, tax-deductible interest (sometimes), requires down payment (3-20%).

Auto Loans

Purpose: Purchase vehicles. Types: New car loans (lower rates), Used car loans (higher rates), Lease buyouts, Refinancing. Key Features: Short terms (3-7 years), secured by vehicle, rates depend on credit and vehicle age, often offered through dealerships.

Personal Loans

Purpose: Consolidate debt, home improvements, medical expenses, weddings, etc. Types: Secured (backed by collateral), Unsecured (based on credit), Fixed-rate, Variable-rate. Key Features: No collateral required for unsecured, quick funding, higher rates than secured loans.

Student Loans

Purpose: Education expenses. Types: Federal (government-backed, income-driven repayment), Private (from banks/lenders), Parent PLUS. Key Features: Deferred payments while in school, income-based repayment options, potential forgiveness programs.

Business Loans

Purpose: Start, expand, or operate business. Types: Term loans, SBA loans, Equipment financing, Lines of credit. Key Features: Require business plan, often need personal guarantee, rates vary by business credit.

Key Loan Characteristics

Feature Secured Loans Unsecured Loans
Collateral Required Yes (house, car, etc.) No
Interest Rates Lower (4-8%) Higher (8-36%)
Loan Amounts Higher Lower
Terms Longer (up to 30 years) Shorter (1-7 years)
Approval Time Slower (weeks) Faster (days)
Risk to Borrower Could lose collateral No asset risk
Examples Mortgages, auto loans Personal loans, credit cards

Loan Payment Formula & Amortization

The Standard Loan Payment Formula

M = P [ r(1+r)^n ] / [ (1+r)^n - 1 ]

Where:

  • M = Monthly payment
  • P = Principal loan amount (after down payment)
  • r = Monthly interest rate (annual rate ÷ 12)
  • n = Total number of payments (term in years × 12)
Example Calculation: $250,000 loan at 6.5% for 30 years:
P = 250,000, r = 0.065/12 = 0.0054167, n = 30×12 = 360
M = 250,000 × [0.0054167(1.0054167)^360] / [(1.0054167)^360 - 1]
M = 250,000 × [0.0054167 × 10.9357] / [10.9357 - 1]
M = 250,000 × 0.059213 / 9.9357 = $1,580.17/month

How Amortization Works

Early Payments: Mostly interest. Month 1: $1,580 payment = $1,354 interest, $226 principal.

Middle Payments: Balance shifts. Year 15: $1,580 payment = $786 interest, $794 principal.

Late Payments: Mostly principal. Final payment: $1,580 = $8 interest, $1,572 principal.

Total Cost Calculation

Total Paid = Monthly Payment × Number of Payments

Total Interest = Total Paid - Principal

Impact of Extra Payments

Extra payments go directly to principal, reducing future interest. Formula for new payoff time after extra payments requires recalculating amortization schedule with reduced principal.

Compare Different Loan Options

15-Year vs 30-Year Mortgage

$300,000 at 6.5%

30-Year: $1,896/month, Total: $682,632, Interest: $382,632

15-Year: $2,613/month, Total: $470,340, Interest: $170,340

Savings: Pay $717 more/month but save $212,292 in interest!

New vs Used Car Loan

$30,000 at Different Rates

New (5%): $566/month, Total: $33,960, Interest: $3,960

Used (8%): $608/month, Total: $36,480, Interest: $6,480

Difference: $42/month more, $2,520 more interest over 5 years

Key Comparison Metrics

Metric What It Measures Why It Matters
Monthly Payment Cash flow impact Can you afford it within your budget?
Total Interest Cost of borrowing How much extra you pay for the loan
APR vs Interest Rate True cost including fees APR includes origination fees, points, etc.
Loan Term Payoff timeline Shorter = less interest but higher payments
Amortization Schedule Principal/interest split over time Shows when you build equity vs pay interest
Total Cost of Loan Principal + interest + fees True price of what you're buying
Rule of Thumb: Keep total debt payments below 36% of gross income. Mortgage alone should be below 28%. Auto loans: 10-15% maximum. Personal loans: Only for needs, not wants, and pay off quickly.

Loan Management Strategies

Before Taking a Loan

  1. Check your credit score: Higher score = lower rates. Aim for 740+ for best rates.
  2. Shop around: Get quotes from 3-5 lenders. Even 0.25% difference saves thousands.
  3. Calculate true affordability: Include insurance, taxes, maintenance for houses/cars.
  4. Save for larger down payment: 20% avoids PMI on mortgages, gets better rates.
  5. Consider total cost, not just monthly payment: Longer term = lower payment but more interest.

During the Loan

  1. Make extra payments: Even $50/month extra cuts years off mortgage.
  2. Pay biweekly instead of monthly: 26 biweekly payments = 13 monthly payments/year.
  3. Target high-interest debt first: Pay minimum on low-rate loans, extra on high-rate.
  4. Refinance when rates drop: Rule of thumb: Refinance if rate drops 1%+.
  5. Never skip payments: Late fees hurt, and it damages credit score.

Special Strategies by Loan Type

Mortgages: Make one extra payment/year. Round up payments ($1,580 → $1,600). Refinance to shorter term when possible.

Auto Loans: Make larger down payment. Choose shorter term if affordable. Pay off before trading in.

Student Loans: Use income-driven repayment if struggling. Consider consolidation. Explore forgiveness programs.

Personal Loans: Use for debt consolidation at lower rate. Pay off highest-rate credit cards first.

The Debt Snowball vs Avalanche: Snowball: Pay smallest debts first for psychological wins. Avalanche: Pay highest interest rates first for mathematical efficiency. Both work - choose what keeps you motivated!

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I choose 15-year or 30-year mortgage?

15-year: Build equity faster, pay less interest (saves $100,000+), forced savings, but higher payments (40-50% higher). 30-year: Lower payments (easier to afford), flexibility to invest difference, tax deduction benefit longer. Best of both: Get 30-year but make extra payments like it's 15-year.

How much house can I afford?

28/36 Rule: Mortgage ≤ 28% of gross income. Total debt ≤ 36% of gross income. Example: $100,000 income = $2,333/month max for mortgage + $3,000/month max for all debt. Better approach: Budget based on take-home pay, not gross. Include taxes, insurance, maintenance (1-2%/year of home value).

What's better: lower rate or shorter term?

Usually shorter term saves more money, even with similar rate. Example: $200,000 at 6%: 30-year = $231,676 interest, 15-year = $103,788 interest (saves $127,888). But ensure you can afford higher payment. Run both scenarios through calculator.

How do extra payments work?

Extra payments reduce principal immediately. This reduces future interest calculations. $100 extra/month on $250,000 mortgage at 6.5% saves $52,000 interest and pays off 5.5 years early. Always specify "apply to principal" when making extra payments.

Should I pay off loans early or invest?

Compare rates: If loan rate > expected investment return, pay off debt. If investment return > loan rate, invest. Example: 4% mortgage vs 7% stock market average = invest. 8% credit card debt vs 7% stock market = pay debt. Also consider risk tolerance and peace of mind.

What credit score do I need for best rates?

Mortgage: 740+ for best rates, 620 minimum for conventional. Auto: 720+ for best, 660+ for good. Personal loans: 720+ for best, 580+ for some lenders. Student loans: Federal loans don't require credit check (except PLUS).

How does refinancing work?

Replace existing loan with new one, usually to get lower rate, change term, or cash out equity. Costs 2-5% of loan amount in fees. Break-even point = when savings exceed costs. Generally worth it if rate drops 1%+ and you'll stay in home long enough to recoup costs.

What is PMI and how do I avoid it?

Private Mortgage Insurance required when down payment < 20%. Costs 0.5-1% of loan/year. Avoid by putting 20% down, using piggyback loan (80-10-10), or choosing lender-paid PMI (higher rate). PMI automatically cancels at 78% loan-to-value ratio.

Loan Terminology Glossary

Term Definition Why It Matters
Principal Amount borrowed The actual money you receive
Interest Rate Cost of borrowing as % Determines monthly payment and total cost
APR Annual Percentage Rate Includes interest + fees = true cost
Amortization Gradual repayment schedule Shows principal/interest split over time
Term Length of loan Affects payment amount and total interest
Equity Value minus loan balance Your ownership stake in the asset
PMI Private Mortgage Insurance Extra cost if down payment < 20%
Escrow Account for taxes/insurance Part of monthly payment for these costs
Points Upfront fee to lower rate 1 point = 1% of loan amount
Fixed vs Variable Rate Rate stays same vs changes Fixed = predictable, Variable = can go up/down
Prepayment Penalty Fee for paying off early Check before making extra payments
Debt-to-Income Ratio Monthly debt ÷ monthly income Key factor lenders consider
Closing Costs Fees to originate loan 2-5% of loan amount for mortgages
LTV (Loan-to-Value) Loan ÷ property value Lower LTV = better rates, no PMI at 80%
DTI (Debt-to-Income) Total debt ÷ gross income Most lenders want ≤ 36%

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