Calculate monthly EMI, total interest, and total payment for any loan. View detailed amortization schedule, visualize principal vs interest breakdown, and calculate prepayment impact. Perfect for mortgages, car loans, personal loans, and more.
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Calculate exact monthly EMI payments for any loan amount, interest rate, and term. See total interest paid and total payment over the loan lifetime.
View detailed month-by-month breakdown showing payment, principal, interest, and remaining balance. Download the complete schedule as CSV.
See principal vs interest breakdown in a visual pie chart. Understand how much of your total payment goes to interest vs principal.
Calculate the impact of extra monthly payments. See how prepayment reduces total interest and shortens the loan term significantly.
Loans are a fundamental part of modern finance, whether you're buying a home, purchasing a car, funding education, or managing personal expenses. Understanding how loans work—especially the relationship between principal, interest, and monthly payments—is essential for making informed financial decisions. This calculator helps you understand exactly what you'll pay over the life of a loan and how different factors affect your monthly payment and total cost.
EMI stands for Equated Monthly Installment. It is the fixed amount you pay every month to repay a loan. Each EMI payment includes both principal (the original loan amount) and interest (the cost of borrowing). The proportion of principal and interest changes over time. In the early years of a loan, most of each payment goes toward interest. As the loan matures, more of each payment goes toward principal. This is called amortization. By the end of the loan term, almost the entire payment is principal. Understanding this structure helps you see why prepayments early in a loan are particularly effective at reducing total interest.
EMI is calculated using a mathematical formula that ensures equal monthly payments: EMI = [P × r × (1+r)^n] / [(1+r)^n – 1], where P is the principal loan amount, r is the monthly interest rate (annual rate divided by 12 and converted to decimal), and n is the number of monthly installments (loan term in months). This formula accounts for compound interest, ensuring that each payment reduces the principal by a specific amount while covering the interest on the remaining balance. The beauty of this formula is that it produces a consistent monthly payment despite the changing balance.
Making extra payments on your loan can save thousands of dollars in interest and significantly shorten your loan term. When you make an extra payment, it goes entirely toward reducing the principal balance (unless specified otherwise by your lender). Reducing the principal means less interest accrues in future months. Even small extra payments—like $50 or $100 per month—can have a dramatic effect over time. For example, on a 30-year mortgage, paying just $200 extra per month could save tens of thousands in interest and cut years off the loan term. Always check with your lender to ensure extra payments are applied to principal and not future interest.
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