Amortization Calculator

See your full loan breakdown โ€” monthly payments, total interest, and payoff schedule.

โšก Live Results โœ“ Extra Payments โœ“ Full Schedule โœ“ Free
$
%
๐Ÿ“Š

Enter your loan details and click Calculate to see results.

Amortization Calculator

What Is an Amortization Calculator?

An amortization calculator shows your monthly loan payment and a full breakdown of how each payment is split between principal and interest over the life of your loan. It works for any fixed-rate loan โ€” mortgages, auto loans, personal loans, student loans, and more.

Results update instantly as you type, so you can experiment with different loan amounts, interest rates, or terms to find a payment that fits your budget.

๐Ÿ’ก
Key insight: On a $300,000 mortgage at 6.5% over 30 years, your monthly payment is $1,896 โ€” but you'll pay $382,633 in total interest over the life of the loan. Shortening the term to 15 years raises the payment to $2,613, but cuts total interest to just $170,280 โ€” a savings of over $212,000.

How to Use This Calculator

Fill in each field to get your payment and amortization schedule. Here's what each input means:

Loan Amount

The total amount you are borrowing โ€” before any down payment. For a mortgage, this is the home price minus your down payment. For an auto loan or personal loan, it's the total financed amount.

Annual Interest Rate

Enter the annual interest rate (APR) your lender has quoted. Even a small difference in rate has a major impact over time โ€” a 0.5% higher rate on a $300,000 30-year mortgage adds roughly $31,000 in total interest.

Loan Term

The number of years (or months) you have to repay the loan. Common terms are 30 or 15 years for mortgages, 3โ€“7 years for auto loans, and 1โ€“7 years for personal loans. A shorter term means higher monthly payments but far less total interest paid.

Start Date (optional)

Set when your first payment begins to get accurate payment dates in your amortization schedule.

Extra Payments (optional)

Add a monthly, yearly, or one-time extra payment to see how it shortens your loan term and reduces total interest. Even an extra $100/month can save thousands โ€” see the Extra Payments section below.

What Is Amortization?

Amortization is the process of paying off a loan through regular, equal payments made over a fixed period of time. Each payment you make covers two things:

  • Interest โ€” the cost of borrowing, calculated on your current remaining balance.
  • Principal โ€” the portion that directly reduces what you owe.

At the start of a loan, most of your payment goes toward interest because your balance is high. As you pay down the principal, the interest charged each month decreases โ€” so more of each payment goes toward the principal. By the final payments, almost your entire payment is reducing the balance.

This structure applies to most consumer loans โ€” mortgages, auto loans, personal loans, and student loans. Credit cards are revolving debt and work differently โ€” they are not amortized the same way.

๐Ÿ“Š
Example: On a $200,000 loan at 6% for 15 years, your first payment of $1,688 sends $1,000 to interest and only $688 to principal. By your final payment, just $8 goes to interest and $1,680 goes to principal โ€” the ratio completely flips over time.

How Amortization Works

When you take out a loan, your lender calculates a fixed monthly payment that will pay off your full balance โ€” principal plus interest โ€” by the end of the loan term. The payment amount never changes, but what's inside each payment does.

Here's a real example across three key points in a loan's life:

Payment Monthly Payment Goes to Interest Goes to Principal Remaining Balance
Month 1 $1,688 $1,000 $688 $199,312
Month 90 (midpoint) $1,688 $651 $1,037 $129,467
Month 180 (final) $1,688 $8 $1,680 $0

Example: $200,000 loan ยท 6% annual interest ยท 15-year term

Over the full 15 years, you'd pay $103,788 in total interest on top of the $200,000 principal โ€” a total cost of $303,788. The calculator above shows this breakdown instantly for your own numbers.

The formula behind the calculation is:

M = P ร— [r(1+r)โฟ] / [(1+r)โฟ โ€“ 1]

  • M = monthly payment
  • P = loan amount (principal)
  • r = monthly interest rate (annual rate รท 12)
  • n = total number of payments (years ร— 12)

Amortization Schedule Explained

An amortization schedule โ€” also called an amortization table โ€” is a complete, payment-by-payment breakdown of your entire loan. For each payment period it shows:

  • Payment number and date
  • Total payment amount
  • Interest portion of that payment
  • Principal portion of that payment
  • Remaining loan balance after that payment

The schedule is useful for more than just curiosity. You can use it to:

  • See exactly how much of each payment reduces your balance vs. goes to your lender as profit.
  • Find your exact remaining balance at any point โ€” helpful when refinancing or selling a home.
  • Understand why paying extra early in the loan saves the most money (interest is highest when the balance is highest).
  • Plan ahead for tax purposes, since mortgage interest may be deductible.

This calculator generates a full monthly amortization schedule automatically. You can also view it as a yearly summary for a quicker big-picture view.

Extra Payments โ€” Pay Off Your Loan Faster

Making extra payments reduces your principal faster. Since interest is calculated on your remaining balance, a lower balance means less interest every month going forward โ€” which shortens your loan term and saves you money.

Three Ways to Add Extra Payments

  • Extra monthly payment โ€” a fixed additional amount added every month (e.g., $100 extra per month).
  • Extra yearly payment โ€” a lump sum once a year (e.g., putting your tax refund toward the loan).
  • One-time payment โ€” a single extra payment made at a specific point in the loan.

Here's how even modest extra payments impact a standard 30-year mortgage:

Scenario Monthly Payment Total Interest Loan Paid Off Interest Saved
No extra payments $1,199 $231,676 30 years โ€”
+$100/month extra $1,299 $192,143 ~26.5 years $39,533
+$200/month extra $1,399 $160,718 ~23.5 years $70,958

Example: $200,000 loan ยท 6% annual interest ยท 30-year term

โš ๏ธ
Prepayment penalties: Some loan agreements charge a fee for paying off a loan early or making large extra payments. Always check your loan documents before making significant extra payments.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between an amortization schedule and a payment schedule? +
A payment schedule simply shows how much you owe and when each payment is due. An amortization schedule goes further โ€” it breaks every payment into its interest and principal components and shows your exact remaining loan balance after each payment.
Does this calculator work for mortgages? +
Yes. Enter your loan amount, mortgage rate, and loan term (typically 15 or 30 years) to see your monthly principal and interest payment plus a full amortization schedule. Note that your actual mortgage payment may also include property taxes, homeowner's insurance, and PMI โ€” this calculator covers only the principal and interest portion.
Does this calculator work for auto loans and personal loans? +
Yes. It works for any fixed-rate, fully amortizing loan. Simply enter the loan amount, interest rate, and repayment term โ€” the calculator handles the rest.
What happens if I have an adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM)? +
This calculator is designed for fixed-rate loans. For an ARM, the amortization schedule is accurate only through the initial fixed-rate period. Once your rate adjusts, your monthly payment and schedule will change accordingly.
What is negative amortization? +
Negative amortization occurs when your monthly payment is less than the interest that accrues in that period. The unpaid interest gets added to your principal balance, meaning you owe more over time instead of less. This can happen with some adjustable-rate mortgages and income-driven student loan repayment plans. Standard fixed-rate loans do not have negative amortization.
What is the difference between an amortizing loan and a balloon loan? +
An amortizing loan is fully paid off through regular scheduled payments by the end of the term. A balloon loan has smaller monthly payments during the term, but requires a large lump-sum payment at the end. Most mortgages and auto loans are fully amortizing. Balloon loans are more common in commercial real estate and certain short-term financing arrangements.
Can I use this calculator to compare loan offers? +
Yes โ€” that's one of the most practical uses. Run the calculator twice with two different interest rates or loan terms to see the difference in monthly payment and total interest side by side. Even a 0.25% difference in rate or a 5-year difference in term can mean tens of thousands of dollars over the life of a loan.
Quick Tip
Pay extra early, not late. Because interest is calculated on your remaining balance, extra payments made in the first few years of a loan save far more than the same extra payments made toward the end.
Common Loan Terms
Mortgage: 15 or 30 years
Auto loan: 36 โ€“ 84 months
Personal loan: 12 โ€“ 84 months
Student loan: 10 โ€“ 25 years