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Loan Payment Calculator

100–10000000
0–30
1–600
YOUR RESULT

Loan Payment Calculator

495.03
MONTHLY PAYMENT
Total Paid29,701.8
Total Interest4,701.8
⚡ ProcalcAI

How Fixed Monthly Loan Payments Are Calculated

Planning a loan is easier when you can see the payment math upfront. ProcalcAI’s Loan Payment Calculator helps you estimate your monthly payment for a given loan amount and term, then shows the total interest you’ll pay over time and how the cost breaks down across the life of the loan. You’ll use the Loan Payment Calculator if you’re a homebuyer comparing mortgage options, a small business owner pricing equipment financing, or a car shopper trying to keep a payment within budget. For example, when you’re deciding between a 48‑month and 60‑month auto loan, you can quickly see how a lower monthly payment can add up to more interest overall, and what that tradeoff costs you in dollars. To get results, you enter the loan amount, interest rate, and loan term, and you receive an estimated monthly payment along with total interest and overall repayment totals. It’s a straightforward way to compare scenarios side by side before you commit to a lender’s offer.

How does the loan payment calculator work?

Enter your values into the input fields and the calculator instantly computes the result using standard finance formulas. No sign-up required — results appear immediately as you type.

How Monthly Loan Payments Are Calculated

A fixed-rate loan payment is determined by three inputs: the amount borrowed, the annual interest rate, and the number of months in the term. The formula calculates the exact payment that will bring the balance to zero by the final month, with each payment covering that month's interest charge plus a portion of principal. Early payments are interest-heavy; later payments are principal-heavy.

What This Calculator Returns

Enter the loan principal, annual interest rate, and term in months. You get the fixed monthly payment, total amount paid over the life of the loan, and total interest cost. The difference between total paid and the original principal is what the loan costs you in interest — this number often surprises people. A 25,000 loan at 7 percent over 60 months costs roughly 4,700 in interest alone.

Choosing the Right Loan Term

Shorter terms mean higher monthly payments but dramatically less total interest. Longer terms lower the monthly burden but cost more over time. The sweet spot depends on your cash flow. If you can comfortably afford the payment on a 36-month term, take it — you will save thousands compared to stretching to 60 months. If cash flow is tight, a longer term with occasional extra payments gives you flexibility without locking in high monthly obligations.

Related Tools

For a full month-by-month breakdown, use the Amortization Calculator. To see exactly how much of your loan cost is interest, try the Loan Interest Calculator. If you want to compare two different loan offers, the Loan Comparison Calculator shows the difference side by side.

Loan Payment Calculator — Frequently Asked Questions(8)

Common questions about loan payment.

Last updated Apr 2026

What the Loan Payment Calculator Does (and What You Need to Enter)

A loan payment is usually an equal monthly amount that covers both interest and principal. ProcalcAI’s Loan Payment Calculator helps you estimate that monthly payment and also shows the full cost of borrowing over the life of the loan: total paid and total interest.

You’ll enter three inputs:

- Loan Amount: the principal (the amount you borrow) - Interest Rate %: the annual interest rate (nominal APR as a percentage) - Term (months): the number of monthly payments (the loan term)

The calculator returns:

- Monthly payment (often called PMT) - Total paid over the whole term - Total interest paid (total paid minus principal)

This is the standard amortizing-loan setup used for many personal loans, auto loans, and fixed-rate installment loans.

The Math Behind Monthly Loan Payments (Amortization Formula)

Most fixed-rate loans use an amortization schedule: you pay the same amount each month, but early payments are mostly interest and later payments are mostly principal.

### Step 1: Convert APR to a monthly rate If your annual rate is given as a percent, convert it to a monthly decimal rate:

- Monthly rate, r = (APR / 100) / 12

Example: APR = 7 r = (7 / 100) / 12 = 0.07 / 12 = 0.0058333333

### Step 2: Use the payment formula Let: - p = principal - r = monthly interest rate - n = number of months

If r > 0, the monthly payment is:

PMT = p × ( r × (1 + r)^n ) / ( (1 + r)^n − 1 )

This is exactly the logic the calculator uses.

### Step 3: Compute totals Once you have PMT:

- Total paid = PMT × n - Total interest = (PMT × n) − p

### Special case: 0% interest If the interest rate is 0, the payment is just:

PMT = p / n

That avoids division by zero and matches how a no-interest installment plan works.

Worked Example 1: Standard Installment Loan

Inputs - Loan Amount (p): 25,000 - Interest Rate: 7% - Term (n): 60 months

1) Monthly rate r = 0.07 / 12 = 0.0058333333

2) Payment Compute (1 + r)^n: (1.0058333333)^60 ≈ 1.4176

Now plug into the formula: PMT = 25,000 × (0.0058333333 × 1.4176) / (1.4176 − 1)

Numerator: 0.0058333333 × 1.4176 ≈ 0.008269 Denominator: 1.4176 − 1 = 0.4176 Fraction: 0.008269 / 0.4176 ≈ 0.01980

PMT ≈ 25,000 × 0.01980 = 495.00/month (rounded to cents)

3) Totals Total paid = 495.00 × 60 = 29,700.00 Total interest = 29,700.00 − 25,000 = 4,700.00

Interpretation: A 7% loan over 60 months adds about 4,700 in interest, and the monthly payment is about 495.00.

Worked Example 2: Shorter Term vs. Longer Term (Cost Tradeoff)

Let’s keep the same loan amount and rate, but change the term to see the tradeoff between monthly payment and total interest.

Inputs - Loan Amount: 18,000 - Interest Rate: 6% - Term: 36 months

1) Monthly rate r = 0.06 / 12 = 0.005

2) Payment (1 + r)^n = (1.005)^36 ≈ 1.1967

PMT = 18,000 × (0.005 × 1.1967) / (1.1967 − 1) = 18,000 × (0.0059835) / 0.1967 = 18,000 × 0.03042 ≈ 547.56/month

3) Totals Total paid = 547.56 × 36 = 19,712.16 Total interest = 19,712.16 − 18,000 = 1,712.16

What this shows: A shorter loan term usually means a higher monthly payment but less total interest. If you extended the same loan to 60 months, the payment would drop, but total interest would rise because you’re paying interest for more months.

Worked Example 3: 0% Interest Loan (Simple Division)

Inputs - Loan Amount: 12,000 - Interest Rate: 0% - Term: 48 months

Since r = 0, use the 0% rule:

PMT = 12,000 / 48 = 250.00/month Total paid = 250.00 × 48 = 12,000.00 Total interest = 0.00

Interpretation: With 0% financing, the monthly payment is just principal spread evenly across months.

How to Use the Results (Monthly Payment, Total Paid, Total Interest)

Think of the calculator output as three different decision tools:

1) Monthly payment (PMT) answers: “Can my budget handle this?” If the payment is too high, you can: - Increase the term (more months) - Reduce the principal (bigger down payment, smaller loan) - Shop for a lower rate

2) Total interest answers: “How expensive is this loan?” Two loans can have similar monthly payments but very different total interest if the terms differ.

3) Total paid answers: “What’s the full cost over time?” This is useful for comparing borrowing vs. saving up and paying cash later.

Pro Tips for More Accurate Loan Planning

- Use the rate you’ll actually get. Your quoted APR can vary by credit score, collateral, and lender fees. Even a 1% change in APR can noticeably change total interest over longer terms. - Compare terms using total interest, not just payment. A lower payment can be tempting, but it often comes with significantly higher total interest. - Round like a lender would. The calculator rounds the payment to cents. Real lenders may also round interest calculations per period, so your final totals can differ slightly. - Stress-test your budget. If you can afford the payment, also check whether you can afford it if your income dips or expenses rise. A payment that is barely affordable is risky. - Consider prepayment scenarios separately. This calculator assumes you make the same payment for n months. If you plan to pay extra, your actual total interest will likely be lower.

Common Mistakes (and How to Avoid Them)

- Entering the term in years instead of months. The input is “Term (months).” If you type 5 for a 5-year loan, you’ll accidentally model a 5-month loan. For 5 years, enter 60. - Mixing APR and monthly rate. The calculator expects an annual percentage rate and converts it to a monthly rate internally. Don’t divide by 12 yourself before entering it. - Assuming the payment includes everything. Many real loans have extras like taxes, insurance, or fees that are not part of principal-and-interest. This tool focuses on the core amortized payment. - Forgetting that interest cost depends on time. People often focus only on the interest rate, but the number of months matters a lot. A moderate rate over a long term can cost more than a higher rate over a short term. - Comparing loans using payment only. Always check total interest and total paid to understand the true cost.

With these inputs and formulas, you can use ProcalcAI’s Loan Payment Calculator to quickly estimate your monthly payment, understand your amortization cost, and compare loan options in a budget-friendly way.

Authoritative Sources

This calculator uses formulas and reference data drawn from the following sources:

- Bureau of Labor Statistics - HUD — Housing and Urban Development - Federal Reserve — Economic Data

Loan Payment Formula & Method

This loan payment calculator uses standard finance formulas to compute results. Enter your values and the formula is applied automatically — all math is handled for you. The calculation follows industry-standard methodology.

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