Loan Calculator

Last reviewed on April 28, 2026.

Calculate monthly payments, total interest, and amortization schedules for any type of loan. Compare different loan options, understand the impact of extra payments, and make informed borrowing decisions.

Loan Details

Typical mortgage: $300,000
For mortgages only
$60,000
Current avg: 7.32% (30-yr mortgage)

Additional Costs (Optional)

Avg: 1.2% of home value/year
Avg: $1,500/year
If down payment < 20%
If applicable

Extra Payments (Optional)

Additional principal payment
Annual bonus payment
Month number for payment

Loan Tips

  • A 20% down payment avoids PMI on mortgages
  • Bi-weekly payments save interest and time
  • Extra payments go directly to principal
  • Refinancing may lower your rate
  • 15-year mortgages save significant interest

Understanding Loans

How Interest Works

Loan interest is calculated on the remaining principal balance. Early in the loan, most of your payment goes to interest. As the balance decreases, more goes to principal. This is why extra payments early in the loan save the most money.

The 28/36 Rule

Lenders typically want your housing payment below 28% of gross monthly income and total debt payments below 36%. For a $6,000/month income, that's $1,680 for housing and $2,160 for all debt payments.

Points vs Rate

Mortgage points let you buy a lower rate. One point costs 1% of the loan amount and typically lowers the rate by 0.25%. Points make sense if you'll keep the loan long enough for interest savings to exceed the upfront cost.

When to Refinance

Consider refinancing when rates drop 0.75-1% below your current rate. Factor in closing costs (2-5% of loan amount) and how long you'll stay in the home. The break-even point is typically 2-3 years.

Types of Loans

Loan Type Typical APR (2026) Typical Term Best For
30-Year Mortgage 7.32% 30 years Lower monthly payments, flexibility
15-Year Mortgage 6.75% 15 years Faster equity, less total interest
Auto Loan (New) 7.5% 3-7 years New vehicle purchases
Auto Loan (Used) 8.75% 3-5 years Used vehicles 1-5 years old
Personal Loan 12.5% 2-7 years Debt consolidation, home improvement
Student Loan (Federal) 5.50% 10-25 years Education expenses
Student Loan (Private) 7-14% 5-20 years When federal aid insufficient
HELOC 8.5% 10-20 years Home equity access, renovations

Strategies to Pay Off Loans Faster

  1. Bi-weekly payments: Make half your monthly payment every two weeks (26 half-payments = 13 full payments/year)
  2. Round up payments: Round $1,847 to $1,900 or even $2,000
  3. Annual bonus: Apply tax refunds, bonuses directly to principal
  4. Refinance to shorter term: Move from 30 to 15 years when affordable
  5. Target highest rate first: Pay minimums on all, extra on highest APR
  6. Recast your mortgage: Large principal payment to lower monthly amount

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I pay off my mortgage early?

It depends on your rate and alternatives. If your mortgage is 4% and you can earn 7% investing, investing may be better. However, being debt-free provides psychological benefits and guaranteed savings on interest.

Fixed vs Variable Rate?

Fixed rates provide payment stability and protection from rate increases. Variable rates start lower but can increase. In 2026's rising rate environment, fixed rates offer more security for long-term loans.

How much can I afford to borrow?

Use the 28/36 rule: housing payment ≤ 28% of gross monthly income, total debt ≤ 36%. Also ensure you have 3-6 months emergency fund after down payment and closing costs.

What credit score do I need?

For best rates: 740+ for mortgages, 720+ for auto loans, 700+ for personal loans. You can qualify with lower scores but will pay higher rates. FHA mortgages accept 580+ with 3.5% down.