Loan calculator

Estimate loan payments and total loan cost.

Last updated: January 6, 2026

Built for fixed-rate loans with monthly, bi-weekly, or weekly payments. Add optional extra payments to see how fast you can pay off the balance.

Loan details

Enter the total amount borrowed (before interest).

Use the rate from your loan offer (APR).

Common terms range from 1 to 7 years.

Choose how often you plan to make payments.

Extra payments are added to each scheduled payment.

Adds upfront fees/taxes to the starting balance (not recurring taxes).

For fixed-rate installment loans like auto, personal, or student loans.

Not for adjustable-rate or interest-only loans. Try our other calculators.

How to use this calculator
  1. Enter the loan amount, APR, and term; use the Years/Months toggle to match your offer.
  2. Choose the payment frequency and any extra payment per period.
  3. Toggle fees/taxes only if they are financed into the balance.

Select Calculate to see the summary, chart, and amortization table. Need a walkthrough? Read how to use a loan calculator.

Summary

Results are estimates for fixed-rate, fully amortizing loans.

Monthly payment

$0

Total interest

$0

Total cost

$0

Payoff time

0 months

Payment frequency: Monthly

Sources: CFPB Loan Estimate, CFPB Regulation Z (Truth in Lending), Federal Student Aid repayment overview

Assumptions: Fixed interest rate, equal payments per selected frequency, and optional fees/taxes added to the starting balance.

Disclaimer: Estimates only. Optional fees/taxes are modeled as upfront additions; recurring taxes and insurance are not included. Always confirm loan terms with your lender.

Principal vs interest over time

See how each payment splits between principal and interest.

Amount per period Month
Principal per period Interest per period

Hover to compare principal vs interest for each period.

Amortization summary

Yearly breakdown for the standard plan.

Year Principal paid Interest paid Remaining balance

How this calculator works

The estimates use the standard amortization formula for fixed-rate loans.

The periodic payment is calculated using:

Payment per period = P * r / (1 - (1 + r)^(-n))

  • P is the starting balance (loan amount plus any financed fees).
  • r is the periodic interest rate (APR divided by payments per year).
  • n is the total number of payments.

If the rate is 0%, payment per period is the balance divided by the number of payments. Extra payments reduce the balance faster, lowering total interest and shortening payoff time.

Loan insights and assumptions

Quick context to help you interpret the results.

APR vs interest rate

APR reflects the cost of borrowing plus required fees. If you are comparing offers, use APR so the comparison is apples-to-apples. For a plain-English breakdown, see loan terms explained.

  • Use the APR from your loan offer, not a teaser rate.
  • Fees paid out of pocket should not be added to the balance toggle.

Payment frequency impact

More frequent payments shrink the balance sooner. Pro tip: bi-weekly works well if you are paid every two weeks.

  • Weekly and bi-weekly can shave off a few payments on long terms.
  • Ask your lender how extra payments are applied.

How amortization works

Fixed-rate loans use level payments. Early on, most of each payment goes to interest because the balance is highest. As the balance drops, the principal share grows, which is why the lines cross on the chart.

Fees and taxes

Some loans roll upfront fees or taxes into the balance. Adding them here increases your starting balance and total interest.

  • Only include fees if they are financed into the loan.
  • Recurring taxes or insurance are not modeled here.

Check your loan estimate for the exact items included.

Example inputs to try

Use these to sanity-check your results before you tweak your own numbers.

  • $20,000 at 6.5% for 5 years
  • $8,500 at 9% for 3 years
  • $32,000 at 4.9% for 6 years

Try the same loan at 36 vs 60 months to see how the interest total changes.

Limits and assumptions

Built for fixed-rate, fully amortizing loans.

  • No variable-rate or interest-only loans.
  • Payments are assumed to be on-time and consistent.
  • Fees/taxes are modeled as one-time additions only.
  • Use this estimate, then confirm with your lender's schedule.

Loan calculator FAQs

Click a question to expand the answer.

How is the payment calculated?

The calculator uses the standard amortization formula for fixed-rate loans. It spreads the balance across equal payments for your selected frequency. You can see the formula in the How this calculator works section. For the plain-English version, read what a loan payment is.

What do extra payments do?

Extra payments go straight to principal, which shortens the payoff and usually lowers total interest. If your lender applies them differently, results will vary.

What if my interest rate is 0%?

At 0% interest, each payment is the balance divided by the number of payments. Total cost equals the amount borrowed (plus any fees you add).

Can I use this for variable-rate or interest-only loans?

Not yet. Variable-rate and interest-only loans change the payment rules over time, so this calculator would be misleading.

Does this include taxes, fees, or insurance?

This models principal and interest. You can add upfront fees or taxes if they are financed, but recurring taxes or insurance are not included.

What is amortization?

Amortization is the schedule that shows how each payment splits between interest and principal. Early payments are interest-heavy because the balance is larger.

How do extra payments affect the payment shown?

The payment shown includes the extra amount you entered. If you set extra to $0, it shows the standard scheduled payment.

Why might my lender's numbers differ?

Differences can come from compounding rules, payment dates, rounding, or lender-specific fees. Use this as an estimate and compare it with your lender's official schedule.

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