Loan Calculator
Estimate monthly payments, total interest, and payoff path in seconds so you can compare loan options clearly and borrow with more confidence.
Formula used
How to use this loan calculator
Enter realistic borrowing assumptions, compare repayment methods, then read KPI and chart outputs in sequence before choosing a final loan structure.
Example (realistic defaults)
These defaults represent a common long-tenor consumer mortgage-style scenario in English locale.
- $250,000 principal, 6.5% annual rate, 360 months, annuity method.
- Compare against equal-principal to visualize early-payment pressure versus lifetime interest.
- Re-run with +1.0% rate and shorter term to stress-test resilience before committing.
What Is a Loan Calculator? How It Works
A loan calculator is a financial modeling tool that computes your monthly payment, total interest, and complete amortization schedule from four inputs: loan principal, annual interest rate, loan term (months), and repayment method. The output turns abstract interest rates into concrete dollar figures you can compare, so you borrow with a clear understanding of the full cost of credit.
This calculator supports both annuity (fixed payment) and linear (equal principal)repayment methods, includes a real-time Debt-to-Income (DTI) ratio calculator, a prepayment impact estimator, and an expandable month-by-month amortization schedule โ all powered by the same math used by banks and mortgage lenders. An AI-powered review adds contextual risk framing to your specific loan structure.
Loan Formulas: Annuity vs Linear Method
Annuity Method (Fixed Monthly Payment)
The annuity method produces equal monthly payments throughout the loan term. The mathematical formula derives from the present value of an annuity and is the standard method for mortgages, auto loans, and most personal loans:
Linear Method (Equal Principal Reduction)
The linear method pays the same principal portion each month, while interest declines as the balance falls. Month 1 has the highest payment; every subsequent month is slightly lower:
Payment month m: = p + Balancemโ1 ร r
The linear method typically saves 5โ15% in total interest compared to annuity, but the first month's payment is the highest โ which can strain cash flow. Use the method toggle in the calculator to compare both outcomes instantly.

Worked Example: $250,000 at 6.5% / 30 Years
Using the standard annuity formula with principal $250,000, annual rate 6.5% (monthly rate = 0.54167%), and term 360 months:
- Monthly rate: r = 6.5% รท 12 = 0.54167% (= 0.0054167)
- Factor: (1 + r)^360 = (1.0054167)^360 = 6.8485
- Monthly payment: M = 250,000 ร 0.0054167 ร 6.8485 รท (6.8485 โ 1) = $1,580.17
- Total repayment: 1,580.17 ร 360 = $568,861
- Total interest: 568,861 โ 250,000 = $318,861
- Interest-to-principal ratio: 318,861 รท 250,000 = 127.5% โ you pay back 2.27ร the amount borrowed
Validation tip: Plug the same numbers into the calculator above. You should see a monthly payment near $1,580 โ any figure more than $1 off suggests a unit mismatch (annual vs monthly rate). Always confirm unit selection before comparing results across tools.
KPI Dashboard Explained
The loan calculator displays six key performance indicators that together give you a complete view of loan affordability and structure:
๐ฐ Monthly Payment
In annuity mode: constant every month. In linear mode: highest in month 1, declining. This is the primary cash-flow constraint โ must fit within your budget with room for emergencies.
๐ Total Repayment
All money leaving your account across the loan term. The gap between this and the principal is the price you pay for borrowing over time.
๐ด Total Interest
The total finance charge โ what the loan actually costs beyond the principal. On a 30-year mortgage, this routinely exceeds the loan amount itself.
โ๏ธ DTI Ratio
Debt-to-Income ratio = monthly payment รท gross monthly income. Lenders use < 28% as a preferred threshold, 28โ36% as acceptable, and > 43% as a high-risk signal.
๐ Break-even Month
The month when cumulative principal paid first exceeds cumulative interest paid. In the first years of a 30-year mortgage, 80%+ of each payment is interest alone.
๐ Interest/Principal
Ratio of total interest to the original principal. A ratio above 100% means the financing cost exceeds the loan amount โ common in long-term mortgages at high rates.
Rate vs Total Cost โ $250,000 / 30-Year Loan
The table below shows how dramatically interest rate changes affect monthly payment and total interest for the same $250,000 loan over 30 years. Use this to understand rate sensitivity before locking in a rate.
| Rate (APR) | Monthly Payment | Total Interest | Interest / Principal | Total Loan Cost | vs 4% baseline |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4.0% | $1,194 | $179,673 | 71.9% | $429,673 | โ |
| 5.0% | $1,342 | $233,133 | 93.3% | $483,133 | +$53,460 |
| 6.0% | $1,499 | $289,595 | 115.8% | $539,595 | +$109,922 |
| 6.5% | $1,580 | $318,861 | 127.5% | $568,861 | +$139,188 |
| 7.0% | $1,663 | $349,007 | 139.6% | $599,007 | +$169,334 |
| 8.0% | $1,834 | $410,388 | 164.2% | $660,388 | +$230,715 |
| 10.0% | $2,193 | $539,735 | 215.9% | $789,735 | +$360,062 |
Amortization Schedule Deep-Dive
An amortization schedule is a complete month-by-month breakdown of every payment โ showing exactly how much goes to principal vs interest that month, and the remaining balance afterward. Understanding amortization is essential because most borrowers dramatically underestimate how much of their early payments are pure interest.

First-Year amortization sample โ $250,000 at 6.5%
| Month | Payment | Principal | Interest | Balance | % Principal Paid |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $1,580.17 | $225.00 | $1,354.17 | $249,775 | 0.09% |
| 2 | $1,580.17 | $226.22 | $1,353.95 | $249,549 | 0.18% |
| 3 | $1,580.17 | $227.45 | $1,352.72 | $249,321 | 0.27% |
| 6 | $1,580.17 | $231.71 | $1,348.46 | $248,401 | 0.64% |
| 12 | $1,580.17 | $238.16 | $1,342.01 | $246,781 | 1.29% |
| 24 | $1,580.17 | $251.60 | $1,328.57 | $243,397 | 2.64% |
| 60 | $1,580.17 | $308.02 | $1,272.15 | $234,640 | 6.14% |
After 5 years (60 months) of $1,580/month payments, only 6.14% of the principal is paid off โ $234,640 still owed. Use the expandable schedule table in the calculator above for your exact inputs.
DTI Ratio and Loan Affordability
Debt-to-Income (DTI) is the percentage of your gross monthly income that goes toward debt payments. It is the single most important affordability metric lenders use for loan approval. Enter your monthly income in the calculator above to see your DTI in real time.
| DTI Range | Risk Level | Lender View | Typical Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| < 28% | Safe | Strong approval odds; best rates available | Proceed with confidence |
| 28โ36% | Acceptable | Generally approvable; rate may be slightly higher | Review all debt obligations |
| 36โ43% | Elevated | May require compensating factors (large down payment, credit score) | Reduce debt or increase income first |
| > 43% | High Risk | Most conventional lenders will decline; FHA max is 43% | Debt consolidation or refinance advised |
Types of Loans and Typical Rates
| Loan Type | Typical Term | Rate Range (2024) | Best Method | Key Consideration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mortgage (30yr Fixed) | 360 months | 6.5โ7.5% | Annuity | Low monthly; very high total interest. Refinance when rates drop > 1%. |
| Mortgage (15yr Fixed) | 180 months | 5.5โ6.5% | Annuity | Higher payment; saves 40%+ in total interest vs 30yr. Best long-term value. |
| Auto Loan | 36โ72 months | 5โ9% | Annuity | Shorter term limits interest exposure. Avoid 84+ month terms for depreciation risk. |
| Personal Loan | 12โ84 months | 8โ20% | Annuity | No collateral; use for debt consolidation. Rate highly credit-score sensitive. |
| Student Loan (federal) | 120โ240 mo | 4โ8% | Annuity | Income-driven repayment options available. Refinancing may lose federal protections. |
| HELOC / Home Equity | 120โ240 mo | 7โ10% | Linear | Variable rate; balance declines fastest with linear method. Good for prepayable debt. |
| Business Loan | 12โ120 months | 6โ15% | Annuity | Factor in revenue seasonality for DTI. Longer term reduces cash-flow pressure. |
Smart Borrowing Strategies
๐ Rate Shopping Saves Thousands
Getting 3โ5 loan offers and choosing the best rate is one of the highest-ROI financial moves available. A 0.5% rate difference on a $250K/30yr loan saves ~$28,000 in total interest.
โก Extra Payments Have Compounding Impact
Adding $100/month to a $250K/6.5%/30yr loan cuts the term by ~5 years and saves $62,000+ in interest. Use the prepayment field in the calculator to model your specific impact.
๐ Biweekly Payments
Paying half your monthly amount every two weeks results in 26 half-payments (= 13 full payments) per year. This effectively makes 1 extra payment/year, cutting a 30yr mortgage to ~25 years.
๐ Compare 15yr vs 30yr
A 15yr mortgage at 6% vs 30yr at 6.5% on $250K: $528/month higher, but saves $190,000+ in total interest and builds equity 2ร faster. Run both scenarios in the calculator.
๐ Refinance When Rates Drop
Refinancing makes financial sense when the rate drop exceeds 1% and you plan to stay in the home long enough to recover closing costs (typically 2โ4% of loan). Calculate break-even months first.
๐ก๏ธ Do Not Over-Extend DTI
Keeping total mortgage (PITI) below 28% of gross income preserves emergency buffer. Even if a lender approves 43% DTI, cash flow tightness at that ratio leaves no room for income shocks.
Frequently Asked Questions
๐ฆWhat is the monthly payment on a $250,000 loan at 6.5% for 30 years?
Using the annuity formula: M = 250,000 ร (0.065/12) ร (1 + 0.065/12)^360 รท [(1 + 0.065/12)^360 โ 1] = $1,580.17 per month. Over 30 years, total repayment is $568,861 โ meaning you pay $318,861 in interest, or 127.5% of the original loan amount. Use this calculator to run your exact numbers instantly.
๐ฆWhat is the difference between annuity and linear loan repayment?
Annuity (also called constant installment) means every monthly payment is equal โ easiest to budget. Linear (equal principal) means you pay the same principal each month, but total payment declines because the interest portion shrinks as the balance falls. Linear saves 5โ15% in total interest but requires higher early payments. Most mortgages and consumer loans use annuity; some commercial and Eastern European bank products use linear.
๐ฆHow does a loan amortization schedule work?
An amortization schedule shows every month of your loan: payment amount, how much goes to principal, how much to interest, and remaining balance. In Month 1 of a 30yr mortgage, over 85% of the payment is interest. By Month 350, over 98% is principal. This front-loading of interest is why early extra payments save disproportionately large amounts over the loan life. The expandable schedule table in this calculator shows all rows with a progress bar per row.
๐ฆWhat DTI is needed for a mortgage approval?
Most conventional lenders (Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac) prefer a back-end DTI (all monthly debts) below 36%, though some approve to 45% with strong compensating factors. FHA loans allow up to 43% DTI. VA and USDA loans have more flexible DTI requirements. The critical number most lenders focus on is the front-end DTI (housing payment only) staying below 28% of gross monthly income. Exceeding 43% DTI makes approval from most traditional lenders unlikely.
๐ฆHow much interest can I save with extra payments?
For a $250,000/6.5%/30yr annuity loan: adding $100/month extra saves approximately $62,000 in interest and cuts the term by 5 years. Adding $500/month extra saves $129,000 in interest and cuts the term by 10 years. The earlier in the loan you make extra payments, the larger the savings โ because you eliminate months of compounded interest at the end. Use the extra payment field in the calculator to model your specific scenario.
๐ฆShould I choose a 15-year or 30-year loan?
A 15-year loan has a higher monthly payment but typically 40โ50% lower total interest cost. For a $250K loan at current rates (15yr at 6%, 30yr at 6.5%): 30yr monthly = $1,580; 15yr monthly = $2,110. The $530/month difference over 15 years = $95,400 extra paid. But total interest on 30yr = $318,861 vs $129,800 on 15yr โ a $189,061 saving. If you can comfortably afford the 15yr payment, it is almost always the better long-term financial choice.
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Disclaimer: This loan calculator provides estimates for educational and planning purposes. Actual loan payments may vary based on lender fees, insurance, prepayment terms, and rounding conventions. Always confirm figures with your lender before making a financial commitment.