Plan smarter borrowing with flexible repayment insights. Adjust frequency, extra payments, and fees for accuracy. See every installment, balance change, and payoff milestone clearly.
The page keeps a single-column flow overall, while the calculator fields use a responsive 3-column, 2-column, and 1-column layout.
These sample cases help users compare how term, rate, and extra payments affect total interest and payoff timing.
| Loan Amount | Rate | Term | Frequency | Extra Payment | Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $25,000 | 6.50% | 5 years | Monthly | $0 | Standard fixed installment plan |
| $18,500 | 7.10% | 4 years 6 months | Biweekly | $25 | Faster payoff with smaller frequent payments |
| $42,000 | 5.80% | 7 years | Monthly | $100 | Interest reduction through consistent overpayment |
r = annual interest rate / payments per year
Payment = P × r / (1 - (1 + r)^-n)Payment = P / n
Interest = Opening Balance × r
Principal = Payment - Interest
Ending Balance = Opening Balance - PrincipalIt lists every installment with payment date, beginning balance, payment amount, principal, interest, extra payment, ending balance, and cumulative interest. This helps you see exactly how the debt shrinks over time.
The calculator converts the annual rate into a periodic rate, then applies the standard amortizing loan formula. If the rate is zero, it simply divides the financed balance by the number of payment periods.
Extra payments reduce principal faster. That lowers future interest charges, shortens the repayment timeline, and usually reduces the total amount repaid over the life of the loan.
Once the remaining balance becomes very small, the last installment only needs to cover the leftover principal and final interest. That often makes the last payment lower than the regular scheduled amount.
Yes. The calculator supports zero-interest repayment plans. In that case, each payment is just the financed balance divided evenly across the selected number of repayment periods.
Choose the schedule that matches your loan agreement or budget cycle. Monthly is common, while biweekly or weekly plans can help spread cash flow and may reduce interest when paired with extra payments.
Yes, if you enter an upfront fee, the tool adds it to the financed balance. That lets you estimate repayment more realistically when setup or origination charges are rolled into the loan.
Lenders may use different rounding rules, payment calendars, compounding methods, or escrow handling. This calculator gives a strong estimate, but your official statement should always be the final reference.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.