Loan Cost Comparison Calculator

Test A, B, or C scenarios quickly. Include upfront costs, extra payments, and frequency options. Find the lowest total cost and monthly burden overall.


Enter loan offers

Enable at least two loans. Fees are treated as paid upfront (deducted from proceeds).
Global settings
Date affects displayed schedule dates only, not totals.
Loan A
Upfront fees
These reduce net proceeds and raise effective APR.
Optional payoff accelerator
Adds to each scheduled payment, shortening payoff time.
Uses full amortization with extra payments included.
Loan B
Upfront fees
These reduce net proceeds and raise effective APR.
Optional payoff accelerator
Adds to each scheduled payment, shortening payoff time.
Uses full amortization with extra payments included.
Loan C
Upfront fees
These reduce net proceeds and raise effective APR.
Optional payoff accelerator
Adds to each scheduled payment, shortening payoff time.
Uses full amortization with extra payments included.
Edit Inputs

Example data table

Use these sample inputs to see how different fees and rates change total cost.
Offer Amount APR Term Frequency Orig. % Points % Closing Extra
Loan A $200,000 6.50% 30 years Monthly 1.00% 0.00% $2,500 $0
Loan B $200,000 6.25% 30 years Monthly 0.50% 0.75% $2,000 $0
Loan C $200,000 6.75% 15 years Monthly 0.00% 0.00% $1,500 $100
Run the calculator to compute payments, payoff time, effective APR, and total cost.

Formula used

Periodic payment
For fixed-rate amortizing loans, the base payment per period is:
PMT = P × r ÷ (1 − (1 + r)−n)
P = loan amount, r = periodic interest rate (APR ÷ periods per year), n = total number of periods (term years × periods per year).
Amortization math
Each period splits the payment into interest and principal:
Interest = Balance × r
Principal = Payment − Interest
New Balance = Balance − Principal − Extra
Extra payments reduce balance faster, cutting interest and payoff time.
Effective APR estimate
The calculator estimates an “effective APR” by solving an internal rate of return (IRR) on cash flows: net proceeds at period 0, then each scheduled payment as a negative cash flow. Annualized as: (1 + IRR)periods per year − 1.

How to use this calculator

  1. Enable at least two loan offers you want to compare.
  2. Enter each loan’s amount, APR, term, and payment frequency.
  3. Add upfront fees like origination, points, and closing costs.
  4. Optional: add an extra payment to accelerate payoff.
  5. Click Compare Loan Costs to see results above.
  6. Use CSV or PDF buttons to export summaries and schedules.
Note: Some lenders charge fees differently. If your fees are paid out-of-pocket, you may still compare total cost, but net proceeds will differ.

Professional notes

Payment size and budgeting

Base payment is driven by APR, term length, and payment frequency. A 30-year schedule spreads principal across more periods, lowering each payment but raising lifetime interest. With $200,000 at 6.50% for 30 years monthly, principal-and-interest is about $1,264.14; at 6.25% it is about $1,231.43. Taxes and insurance are not included, so keep a separate housing or debt buffer.

Upfront fees and proceeds

Origination fees, discount points, and closing costs change what you effectively receive. The calculator treats these as upfront costs that reduce net proceeds. In the example table, Loan A has $4,500 fees (1.00% plus $2,500). Loan B also totals $4,500 (0.50% origination, 0.75% points, and $2,000 closing), showing how different fee mixes can look similar.

Interest and payoff timeline

Interest each period equals the current balance times the periodic rate, so early payments are interest-heavy. Extra payments attack principal directly, shrinking the balance used for future interest. Even $100 extra per period can cut payoff periods materially and reduce total interest, especially on long terms where compounding runs longer. Shorter terms raise payments but compress interest exposure. In the example, $200,000 at 6.75% for 15 years monthly is about $1,769.82, yet the loan finishes sooner, typically lowering total interest even before extra payments materially.

Effective APR as a benchmark

Nominal APR ignores fee timing. Effective APR estimates the annualized internal rate of return using net proceeds at time zero and all scheduled payments thereafter. With $4,500 upfront costs on $200,000, a 6.50% offer rises to roughly 6.931% effective APR in this model. This makes fee-heavy offers easier to compare on one scale.

Choosing the best offer

Start with total cost to see which offer is cheapest over the full payoff path. Next, check base payment to confirm affordability under your budget. If you expect to refinance or sell early, focus on the first 24–60 periods: compare interest paid, balance remaining, and fee recovery by rerunning offers with your expected holding period assumptions.

FAQs

1) What does “total cost” mean here?
Total cost equals all scheduled payments made plus upfront fees you entered. It includes principal, interest, and fees. It does not include taxes, insurance, or maintenance costs that may exist outside the loan.

2) How is effective APR different from APR?
APR is the stated annual rate used to compute interest. Effective APR estimates the annualized rate implied by receiving net proceeds upfront and repaying the scheduled payments over time, so fees and timing are reflected.

3) Should I include property taxes or insurance?
No. This tool focuses on loan mechanics: principal, interest, fees, and payoff timeline. Add taxes and insurance separately when building a full monthly budget, because they vary by location, lender, and coverage choices.

4) What happens when I add an extra payment?
The extra amount is applied each period after the scheduled principal-and-interest payment. It reduces the balance faster, shortens the number of periods, and typically lowers total interest. Results update automatically in totals and charts.

5) My lender charges fees out-of-pocket, not deducted. What should I do?
Enter the fees anyway to compare total cost across offers. If you paid fees out-of-pocket, net proceeds will be higher than shown, but the effective APR and total cost comparison remain useful for ranking options.

6) How can I compare loans if I plan to repay early?
Focus on early-period outcomes. Compare interest paid and remaining balance after your expected holding period, such as 24, 36, or 60 payments. You can approximate by reviewing the amortization preview and exporting the full schedule.

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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.