Calculate your monthly loan payment, total interest, and payoff date. See a full amortization schedule and test extra payments to clear debt sooner.
| Summary | Value |
|---|---|
| Total of Payments | $0.00 |
| Total Interest | $0.00 |
| Payoff / Maturity | β |
| Period | Payment | Principal | Interest | Balance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enter values to see the schedule. | ||||
Most people borrow money at some point β for a home improvement project, to consolidate credit card debt, to fund a business, or to cover an unexpected expense. What separates smart borrowers from expensive ones isn't just the rate they get β it's understanding the full cost of the loan before signing, knowing how extra payments can dramatically cut total interest, and choosing the right loan structure for their specific situation. This guide covers all of it: how loan amortization works in plain English, how to use a loan payoff calculator to shave years off your debt, what different loan types actually cost, and how to borrow confidently and clearly.
A loan calculator takes your loan amount, interest rate, and repayment term and instantly produces your monthly payment, total interest, and full repayment schedule. The best versions go further β showing what happens when you make extra payments, switch to biweekly payments, or target a specific payoff date. These aren't minor features. On a $25,000 personal loan at 9% APR over 5 years, making just $100 extra per month saves over $1,200 in interest and cuts 7 months off the loan. Knowing this before you sign β not after β is what this tool is for.
Our Loan Calculator works for every major loan type in the USA and UK. For more specific tools, also see our Personal Loan Calculator, Home Equity Loan Calculator, Mortgage Calculator, Auto Loan Calculator, and Business Loan Calculator.
Amortization is the process of spreading a loan across equal monthly payments over a fixed term. What most borrowers don't realise is that those equal payments are not split equally between principal and interest. Early payments are heavily weighted toward interest. Only later in the loan do you begin making meaningful progress on the actual balance you owe.
Here is what a loan amortization schedule actually looks like for a $20,000 personal loan at 8.5% APR over 60 months (monthly payment: $410.33):
In Month 1 you pay $141.67 in interest on a $20,000 balance. By Month 60 it's only $2.89. This shift is amortization in action β and seeing it makes clear exactly why paying extra early in the loan has such a powerful impact. Every extra dollar in the early months directly reduces the principal that future interest is calculated on, creating a compounding savings effect. Use the amortization table in our Loan Calculator above to generate this breakdown for your exact numbers.
The loan payoff calculator with extra payments is one of the most practically useful financial tools available. It answers three questions at once: how much interest do I save, how many months do I cut, and when exactly does my loan end if I pay more?
Let's model this with a real example. A $30,000 personal loan at 10% APR over 72 months (standard monthly payment: $556.11):
An extra $200 per month cuts the loan nearly in half and saves over $3,400 in interest. An extra $500 per month cuts it to 3 years and saves over $5,600. These savings grow even more dramatically on larger loans like home equity loans or commercial loans. Use our Loan Calculator above with the extra payments field to model your exact scenario β and also check our Debt Payoff Calculator if you're managing multiple loans simultaneously.
Sometimes you don't want to ask "how much do I save?" β you want to ask "how much do I need to pay to be debt-free by a specific date?" The early loan payoff calculator works in reverse: you set a target payoff date and it tells you the required monthly payment to hit it.
Example: You have a $15,000 personal loan at 7.5% APR with 48 months remaining. Your standard payment is $363/month. You want to pay it off in 30 months instead. The required monthly payment becomes approximately $535 β an extra $172/month β saving you around $1,100 in interest and clearing the debt 18 months sooner.
This type of goal-based payoff planning is particularly effective for people targeting debt freedom before a major life event β buying a home, starting a family, or retiring. Pair our Loan Calculator with our Debt Payoff Calculator for a full debt elimination strategy across multiple loans.
The biweekly payment strategy is one of the most underused tools in personal finance. Instead of making 12 monthly payments per year, you make a payment every two weeks β which equals 26 half-payments, or effectively 13 full monthly payments per year instead of 12. That one extra payment per year, applied consistently, produces surprisingly large savings.
Example: $200,000 mortgage at 6.5% APR over 30 years (monthly payment: $1,264):
The same principle applies to personal loans, auto loans, and home equity loans β any amortized loan benefits from biweekly payments. Use the biweekly option in our Loan Calculator to see your exact savings. Also see our Mortgage Calculator for full home loan biweekly modelling.
Personal loans are unsecured instalment loans β no collateral required β making them one of the most accessible borrowing options for US and UK consumers. They're commonly used for debt consolidation, home improvement, medical bills, or major purchases. Here's what the numbers look like in 2026:
Your credit score is the biggest driver of your personal loan interest rate. A score difference of 100 points can mean 8%β12% more in APR, which on a $15,000 loan over 48 months translates to roughly $3,000β$4,500 more in total interest. Our Personal Loan Calculator lets you compare rates side by side before applying. Also use our APR Calculator to understand the full cost of any offer you receive.
A home equity loan lets you borrow a lump sum against the equity in your property, repaid at a fixed rate over a fixed term. It's essentially a second mortgage β secured against your home β which is why rates are typically lower than personal loans. HELOCs (Home Equity Lines of Credit) work differently, with a variable rate and a draw period followed by a repayment period.
Typical home equity loan features in 2026:
Example: $60,000 home equity loan at 8.0% APR over 10 years β monthly payment of approximately $728, total interest β $27,360. The same loan over 15 years β $573/month but total interest β $43,140. The 10-year term costs $155 more per month but saves $15,780 in total interest β a trade-off worth seeing clearly before you sign. Use our Home Equity Loan Calculator for detailed modelling, and our HELOC Calculator if you're comparing a line of credit instead.
Business loans cover a wide range of structures β from long-term SBA 7(a) loans for equipment and expansion to short-term working capital loans and commercial real estate financing. Each has a different rate structure, term range, and payment profile.
SBA 7(a) loans are the most common small business loan in the US, offering up to $5 million with terms up to 25 years for real estate and 10 years for equipment and working capital. Rates are variable, tied to the prime rate plus a lender spread β in 2026, typical 7(a) rates fall between 10%β13.5% depending on loan size and term. The SBA loan calculator on this page handles both 7(a) and 504 structures. SBA 504 loans are fixed-rate, split between a bank (typically 50%), a Certified Development Company (40%), and a 10% borrower down payment β rates on the CDC portion run approximately 5%β7% in 2026. Use our SBA Loan Calculator for detailed modelling, or the general Business Loan Calculator for any commercial loan type.
DSCR (Debt Service Coverage Ratio) loans are used by real estate investors and don't require traditional income verification β instead, approval is based on the property's rental income relative to its debt obligations. A DSCR of 1.25 means the property generates 25% more income than needed to cover the loan payment. The DSCR loan calculator helps investors check whether a target property's rental income qualifies for financing before applying. Use it alongside our Rental Property Calculator and Real Estate Calculator.
Construction loans are short-term, typically 12β18 months, and work very differently from standard mortgages. During the construction phase you draw funds in stages (called draws) and typically pay interest only on the amount drawn β not the full loan amount. Once construction is complete, the loan either converts to a permanent mortgage (construction-to-permanent loan) or you refinance into one.
Example: $350,000 construction loan at 9% APR, 12-month build period. If you draw an average of 60% of the loan ($210,000) over the build period, your monthly interest-only payments average approximately $1,575. Once converted to a 30-year fixed mortgage at 7%, the permanent payment becomes approximately $2,329/month. Our Construction Loan Calculator models both phases so you can plan your full financing before breaking ground.
A debt consolidation loan rolls multiple debts β credit cards, store cards, existing personal loans β into one lower-interest loan with a single monthly payment. It simplifies repayment and can save significant money in interest, but only if the new rate is genuinely lower than the weighted average of what you're currently paying.
Example before consolidation:
After consolidation into a single $20,000 personal loan at 10% APR over 48 months:
The key caveat: don't consolidate and then run the credit cards back up. Consolidation only helps if you stop adding new debt. Use our Debt Consolidation Calculator to compare your specific debts against consolidation options, and our Debt Payoff Calculator to build a full payoff plan.
An interest-only loan requires you to pay only the interest charges each month for a set period β typically 5β10 years β after which the full principal becomes repayable, either as a balloon or by converting to a standard amortizing payment. Monthly payments during the interest-only period are significantly lower, but you make zero progress on the principal balance.
Example: $200,000 loan at 7% APR:
The $164/month saving during the interest-only period comes at the cost of zero equity building. Interest-only loans make sense for investors with strong cash flow needs or those expecting to sell or refinance before the principal repayment begins. For standard borrowers, the lower payment usually isn't worth the long-term cost. Use the interest-only option in our Loan Calculator to see both scenarios side by side.
A 401(k) loan allows you to borrow up to 50% of your vested balance (maximum $50,000) and repay it with interest β paid back to yourself β over up to 5 years (or longer for home purchases). The rate is typically the prime rate plus 1%β2%, which in 2026 puts most 401(k) loan rates at approximately 9%β10%.
Advantages: no credit check, no impact on your credit score, interest goes back into your own account. Disadvantages: the money is out of the market during the loan period (missing potential investment growth), and if you leave your job the full balance typically becomes due within 60β90 days or is treated as a taxable distribution with a 10% early withdrawal penalty if you're under 59Β½.
Example: $20,000 401(k) loan at 9.5% over 5 years β monthly payment of approximately $419. Repaid to your own account with interest, total repaid: $25,140. But if that $20,000 had stayed invested at 8% annual return over 5 years, it would have grown to approximately $29,400 β meaning the real opportunity cost is closer to $4,260, not just the interest. Use our 401K Calculator alongside the loan calculator to model the full opportunity cost before borrowing from your retirement.
Bridge loans are short-term loans (typically 6β24 months) used to "bridge" a gap β most commonly when buying a new property before your current one sells. Hard money loans are asset-based loans from private lenders, primarily used by real estate investors for fix-and-flip projects. Both carry significantly higher rates than conventional loans β typically 9%β15% APR β but offer speed and flexibility that traditional lenders can't match.
Example: $150,000 bridge loan at 12% APR, interest-only for 12 months:
These loans make financial sense only when the deal economics justify the high carrying cost. Always model the full interest cost before committing. Use our Loan Calculator in interest-only mode for bridge loan calculations, and our Real Estate Calculator to check deal profitability.
Your credit score is the single most powerful factor determining your personal loan APR. Here's a practical rate guide for US personal loans in 2026, along with what $15,000 over 48 months actually costs at each tier:
The difference between an excellent-credit borrower and a poor-credit borrower on the same $15,000 loan is over $10,000 in total interest. This is why improving your credit score before applying β even by 30β50 points β can save thousands. Use our Credit Card Payoff Calculator to reduce utilisation and improve your score before applying, and our Personal Loan Calculator to compare rate scenarios.
One of the most common questions borrowers ask is: "How long will it take to pay this off?" The answer depends entirely on your payment amount relative to the loan balance and interest rate. Here are practical examples across common loan amounts at 9% APR:
Notice that on the $50,000 loan at $750/month, you pay $16,000 in interest β 32% of the original loan amount. Increasing that payment to $1,000/month cuts interest to approximately $9,800 and saves nearly 25 months. Use our Loan Calculator to enter any combination and find your exact payoff timeline.
A longer loan term means a lower monthly payment β but always more total interest. A $20,000 loan at 9% APR costs $4,170 in interest over 48 months, but $6,560 over 72 months. The $79/month saving on the longer term costs you $2,390 more overall. Always look at total cost, not just monthly payment.
Some personal loans and most commercial loans include prepayment penalties β fees charged if you pay off the loan early. Always read the loan agreement for prepayment clauses before planning an aggressive payoff strategy. If a penalty exists, factor it into your early payoff calculations.
Lenders often approve more than you need, and it can be tempting to take it all. Every extra $1,000 borrowed at 12% over 48 months costs approximately $264 in interest. Borrow precisely what you need β not what you qualify for.
Many personal loans charge an origination fee of 1%β8% of the loan amount, deducted upfront or added to the balance. A $20,000 loan with a 4% origination fee means you receive $19,200 but repay $20,000 plus interest. The APR includes this cost β which is why comparing APRs rather than interest rates gives the most accurate picture of total borrowing cost.
Debt consolidation only works if the underlying spending that created the debt changes too. Consolidating $20,000 in credit card debt into a personal loan, then running the credit cards back up, leaves you with $20,000 in personal loan debt plus new credit card balances β worse than before. Consolidation is a tool, not a solution on its own.
Every standard loan payment uses the amortization formula: M = P Γ [r(1+r)^n] Γ· [(1+r)^n β 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. This formula produces a fixed monthly payment that covers interest first, then reduces principal β with the interest portion shrinking and the principal portion growing each month until the loan is fully repaid.
Every extra dollar you pay above the minimum goes directly toward reducing your principal balance. A lower principal means less interest charged in subsequent months, which speeds up your payoff and reduces total interest. Even small extra amounts applied consistently β $50 or $100 per month β can save hundreds or thousands in interest on larger loans. Always confirm with your lender that extra payments are applied to principal and that no prepayment penalty applies.
Most mainstream US lenders require a minimum credit score of around 580β620 for personal loan approval, though the best rates are reserved for scores of 720 and above. Some lenders specialise in bad-credit personal loans (scores 580 and below) but charge APRs of 25%β36%, which makes total cost very high. If your score is below 650, it may be worth waiting 6β12 months to improve it before applying β even a 50-point improvement can lower your APR by 4%β8%, saving thousands over the loan term.
A longer term does lower your monthly payment β but it almost always costs significantly more in total interest. A $15,000 personal loan at 10% APR costs approximately $3,187 in total interest over 36 months (payment: $484/month), versus $5,113 over 60 months (payment: $319/month). You save $165/month with the longer term but pay $1,926 more overall. The right term depends on your cash flow needs, but shorter terms are almost always the better financial choice if you can manage the higher payment.
A secured loan is backed by collateral β your home (home equity loan), car (auto loan), or another asset. Because the lender can repossess the collateral if you default, rates are lower. An unsecured loan (most personal loans) requires no collateral β approval and rate depend entirely on your creditworthiness. Unsecured loans carry higher APRs because the lender takes on more risk. If you have strong home equity and need a large amount, a home equity loan at 8% typically beats a personal loan at 14%.
Paying every two weeks instead of monthly results in 26 half-payments per year β equivalent to 13 full monthly payments instead of 12. That one extra full payment per year consistently reduces your principal faster than standard monthly payments, cutting total interest and shortening the loan term. On a $200,000 mortgage at 6.5% over 30 years, switching to biweekly payments saves approximately $47,000 in interest and pays off the loan over 4 years early. Use the biweekly option in our Loan Calculator to see your specific savings.
A balloon payment loan has lower regular monthly payments (often interest-only or partially amortizing) with a large lump sum payment due at the end of the term. They're common in commercial real estate, bridge loans, and some business loans. The risk is that you must have the funds to make the balloon payment β either from savings, a property sale, or refinancing. Always model both the monthly payments and the balloon amount clearly before committing.
A DSCR (Debt Service Coverage Ratio) loan is primarily used by real estate investors to finance rental properties. Instead of qualifying based on personal income, approval is based on whether the property generates enough rental income to cover the loan payments. A DSCR of 1.0 means income exactly covers the payment; most lenders require 1.20β1.25 for approval. These loans are popular with investors who have multiple properties or irregular personal income. Use our Loan Calculator alongside our Rental Property Calculator to check DSCR compliance for any target property.
Yes β the loan payment formula is universal and works identically for UK loans in pounds sterling. Simply enter the loan amount in Β£, your APR (as quoted by your UK lender), and the term in months. The calculator returns your monthly payment and amortization schedule in whatever currency you've entered. UK personal loan rates in 2026 typically range from approximately 6%β15% APR for good-credit borrowers, with lenders such as Barclays, Lloyds, HSBC, and Santander all using the same standard amortisation formula.
The interest rate is the base annual cost of borrowing. The APR (Annual Percentage Rate) includes the interest rate plus any fees built into the loan β origination fees, broker fees, and other costs β expressed as a single annual percentage. APR is always the more accurate number for comparing loans from different lenders, because two loans with the same interest rate but different fees will have different APRs. Always compare APRs when shopping for a loan. Use our APR Calculator to understand the difference for any specific loan offer.
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Disclaimer: All loan calculations on this page are estimates for informational purposes only and do not constitute financial or lending advice. Actual loan rates, fees, and terms vary by lender, credit profile, and applicable regulations in the USA, UK, or Europe. Always obtain official quotes from licensed lenders before making any borrowing decision.
A personal loan calculator works on the same formula as a mortgage but typically over shorter terms (2β7 years) and higher interest rates (7β25%). On a $20,000 personal loan at 10% for 5 years, you pay $425/month and $5,497 total interest. The calculator accepts any term/rate combination so you can compare lenders like SoFi, LightStream, Marcus, or Barclays before committing.
Car loans in the US typically run 36β72 months; in the UK, 3β5 years on a personal contract purchase (PCP) or hire purchase (HP). The key variables are loan amount, APR, and term length. Longer terms reduce monthly payments but massively increase total interest β a 72-month car loan can pay 30% more in interest than a 48-month loan at the same rate.
Every loan follows an amortization schedule: early payments are mostly interest, later payments are mostly principal. For borrowers who may sell or refinance, this matters hugely β paying off a loan in year 2 of a 5-year term means you have barely touched the principal. View the full schedule before agreeing to any loan.
Making even one extra payment per year dramatically shortens any loan. On a $25,000 auto loan at 7% for 5 years, one extra $425 payment per year saves $430 in interest and knocks 7 months off the loan. The calculator lets you model extra-payment scenarios instantly.
APR (Annual Percentage Rate) includes fees and represents the true cost of borrowing; the nominal rate does not. A loan advertised at 6% nominal with 2% fees has an effective APR closer to 6.5β7%. Always compare loans on APR, not headline rate.
Monthly payment = P Γ [r(1+r)^n] / [(1+r)^n β 1], where P is the loan, r is monthly rate, n is months.
As of 2026, APRs of 7β12% are competitive for borrowers with good credit; 15%+ typically signals fair or poor credit.
Yes β both use the same amortization formula. Only the term length and typical rate differ.
Generally yes: shorter terms mean higher monthly payments but dramatically lower total interest paid.
No. APR is the interest rate plus any loan fees, expressed as a yearly rate. Always compare loans on APR.
In the UK, a personal loan calculator estimates your monthly repayments and the total cost of credit from your loan amount, APR and term in pounds sterling. Lenders advertise a representative APR, which at least 51% of accepted applicants must receive, so the rate you're actually offered may differ depending on your circumstances and credit history.
Most UK personal loans are unsecured with a fixed APR, so your monthly repayments stay the same across the whole term. Terms commonly range from 1 to 7 years. A longer term reduces each monthly repayment but raises the total cost of credit you pay overall.
The representative APR shown in adverts is a guide, not a guarantee. After a credit check, your individual rate could be higher or lower. Under FCA rules you usually have the right to repay early: you can settle the loan in full or make overpayments, though lenders may charge up to 1% (or 0.5% if under 12 months remain) of the amount repaid early as compensation. Always check your agreement for early repayment terms.
Borrow £15,000 at 9% APR over 5 years (60 months). Your fixed monthly repayment is about £311.38. Over the full term you repay roughly £18,683, giving a total cost of credit of around £3,683 in interest.
| Term | Monthly repayment | Total cost of credit |
|---|---|---|
| 3 years | £477.00 | £2,172 |
| 5 years | £311.38 | £3,683 |
| 7 years | £241.30 | £5,269 |
It's the rate advertised to give you a guide to the cost of borrowing, and at least 51% of accepted applicants must get it or better. Your own offer may carry a different APR once the lender reviews your application.
Yes. You can normally make overpayments or settle in full early. Lenders may apply an early repayment charge, typically up to 1% of the amount you clear, so review your credit agreement before paying off the balance.
It's the total interest and charges you pay on top of the amount borrowed. A longer term means smaller monthly repayments but a higher total cost of credit, while a shorter term costs less overall but more each month.