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Vehicle Financing Tool

Auto Finance Calculator

Calculate your exact monthly car payment with trade-in, taxes, fees, rebates, and a full amortization schedule — the most complete auto financing tool online.

✓ Monthly Payment ✓ Trade-In Value ✓ Cash Rebates ✓ Sales Tax & Fees ✓ Full Amortization
$48K
Avg. New Car Price 2025
72 mo
Most Common Loan Term
8.7%
Avg. New Car APR 2025
$700+
Avg. Monthly Payment
🚗 Auto Finance Calculator

Enter your deal details below. Include trade-in, rebates, tax, and fees for the most accurate payment estimate.

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$15K $25K $35K $50K
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$0 $2K $5K $10K
mo
36 mo 48 mo 60 mo 72 mo 84 mo
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4.9% 7.5% 10% 14.9%
%
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🔄 I have a trade-in vehicle
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🎁 I have cash incentives / rebates
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Monthly Payment
per month
Amount Financed
Total Interest
Total Loan Cost
Tax & Fees
Total Out-of-Pocket
📊 Your Cost Breakdown
Amount Financed
Total Interest Paid
Down Payment
Tax & Fees
📅 Amortization Schedule
PeriodPaymentPrincipalInterestBalance
💡

Negotiation Tip: Focus on Total Price, Not Monthly Payment

Dealers often extend the loan term to lower your monthly payment, which dramatically increases total interest paid. Always negotiate the vehicle price first, then discuss financing. Use this calculator to compare different term scenarios side-by-side before stepping into the dealership.

⚠️ Disclaimer: Results are estimates based on the standard amortization formula. Actual payments may vary based on lender fees, credit score, state-specific tax rules, and dealer add-ons. Always confirm final terms with your lender before signing.
auto finance calculator
Auto finance calculator — understanding the full cost of a car loan, from monthly payment to total interest, before you sign at the dealership.

What Is an Auto Finance Calculator and Why You Should Use One Before Visiting Any Dealership

An auto finance calculator is a free online tool that computes your monthly car loan payment along with the total interest, total cost of ownership, and a complete month-by-month repayment schedule — all before you ever talk to a lender or step foot in a dealership. It uses the standard loan amortization formula to translate your vehicle price, down payment, interest rate, and loan term into concrete financial numbers that let you plan, compare, and negotiate from a position of knowledge.

The reason this matters so deeply is that car buying is one of the largest financial decisions most households make — second only to purchasing a home. The average new vehicle in 2025 costs nearly $48,000, and the average monthly payment has crossed $700 for the first time. Yet most buyers enter the dealership without knowing what their payment should be, what interest rate is fair for their credit profile, or how much the total loan will actually cost them over its lifetime. The result is predictable: buyers are routinely sold longer loan terms, higher rates, and expensive add-ons that inflate the total cost by thousands of dollars.

Using our auto finance calculator before you negotiate puts you on equal footing with the finance department. You know your number. You can instantly test whether the payment a dealer quotes you matches what the math actually produces — and if it does not, you know something has been added or inflated somewhere in the deal.

The golden rule of auto financing: Negotiate the vehicle price first, completely separately from the financing. Once the out-the-door price is agreed, then discuss the loan. Mixing the two conversations is how dealers obscure the true cost of each component.

How the Auto Finance Calculator Works: The Formula Explained

The monthly payment calculation uses the standard amortizing loan formula — the same formula used by every bank, credit union, and dealer finance office. Understanding it ensures you can verify any payment quote independently.

Monthly Payment Formula
Monthly Payment = P × R × (1+R)ᴺ ÷ [(1+R)ᴺ − 1] Amount Financed (P) = Vehicle Price − Down Payment − Trade-in Equity + Trade-in Negative Equity − Rebates + (Tax on Vehicle) + Fees

R = Monthly interest rate (APR ÷ 12 ÷ 100)  |  N = Total months (loan term)  |  Trade-in Equity = Trade-in Value − Amount Owed on Trade-in

What Our Calculator Includes That Basic Calculators Miss

Most auto loan calculators online only handle three inputs: loan amount, rate, and term. Our calculator includes every component of a real-world deal:

  • Trade-in vehicle equity or negative equity — if your trade-in is worth more than you owe, the equity reduces your financed amount. If you owe more than it’s worth, the negative equity is rolled into the new loan.
  • Cash rebates and manufacturer incentives — these reduce the financed amount before interest is calculated, saving you more than the face value of the rebate.
  • Sales tax on the vehicle price — in most US states, sales tax applies to the vehicle price (after trade-in in many states), significantly increasing the amount financed.
  • Title, registration, and dealer fees — these flat fees are added to your financed amount and affect both your monthly payment and total interest.
  • Full amortization schedule — monthly and yearly views showing exactly how each payment splits between principal and interest, and your remaining balance at every point.

Understanding the True Cost of a Car Loan: Beyond the Monthly Payment

The monthly payment is the number dealers focus on because it is the easiest to manipulate. By extending the loan term from 60 to 84 months, a dealer can drop your monthly payment by $100–$150 while adding $4,000–$8,000 to your total interest cost. This is not illegal or even uncommon — it is standard practice. The only protection is understanding the relationship between term, rate, and total cost.

Loan TermAPRMonthly PaymentTotal InterestTotal CostExtra vs. 36-mo
36 months7.5%$933$3,583$33,583
48 months7.5%$724$4,730$34,730+$1,147
60 months7.5%$601$5,921$35,921+$2,338
72 months7.5%$519$7,379$37,379+$3,796
84 months7.5%$463$8,853$38,853+$5,270

*$30,000 financed at 7.5% APR. Values are illustrative.

Moving from a 36-month to an 84-month term saves $470 per month but costs an additional $5,270 in total interest on a $30,000 loan. The “savings” are entirely illusory — you are simply paying more for the privilege of paying less per month. The auto finance calculator above lets you compare any two term scenarios instantly.

How Credit Score Affects Your Auto Loan Rate — and How Much It Costs You

Your credit score is the single biggest determinant of the interest rate a lender will offer you. A difference of 100 credit score points can mean 3–6 percentage points in APR on an auto loan, which translates to thousands of dollars in additional interest over the loan’s life. Understanding this relationship is critical before applying for financing.

Credit Score RangeCredit TierTypical APR (New Car)Monthly Payment*Total Interest*
750+Super Prime5.0–6.5%$566–$581$3,960–$4,860
700–749Prime6.5–8.5%$581–$614$4,860–$6,840
660–699Near Prime8.5–11%$614–$652$6,840–$9,120
620–659Subprime11–15%$652–$714$9,120–$12,840
Below 620Deep Subprime15–22%$714–$836$12,840–$20,160

*$30,000 financed over 60 months. Ranges are illustrative approximations.

A super prime borrower (750+) financing $30,000 over 60 months might pay $4,000 in interest. A deep subprime borrower with the same loan might pay $18,000+ in interest — more than half the original loan amount. If your credit score is below 700, taking 6–12 months to improve it before purchasing could save you $5,000–$10,000 on a single auto loan.

Trade-In Vehicles: Equity, Negative Equity, and Dealer Tactics to Watch For

Trading in your existing vehicle at the dealership is the most convenient way to dispose of it, but not always the most financially advantageous. Understanding how trade-in value interacts with your new car financing is essential to avoid being misled.

Positive Equity Trade-In

If your trade-in is worth more than you owe on it, you have positive equity. This equity directly reduces your financed amount on the new car, lowering both your monthly payment and your total interest. For example, a trade-in worth $10,000 with a $3,000 remaining balance provides $7,000 in net equity, which functions exactly like a $7,000 additional down payment.

Negative Equity (Being “Upside Down”)

If you owe more on your current vehicle than it is worth, you have negative equity — commonly called being “underwater” or “upside down.” This negative equity does not disappear when you trade in the car; the dealer rolls it into your new loan. Our calculator includes the “Amount Owed on Trade-in” field for exactly this reason. If your trade-in is worth $8,000 but you owe $12,000, the $4,000 negative equity is added to your new loan principal, increasing your monthly payment and total interest.

Private Sale vs. Dealer Trade-In

Dealers typically offer 10–20% less than private market value for trade-ins because they need a margin to resell the vehicle profitably. Selling your car privately before purchasing new — even if slightly inconvenient — often nets $2,000–$5,000 more than a dealer trade-in. Use that difference as additional down payment and you reduce both your financed amount and total interest significantly.

Dealer vs. Bank vs. Credit Union vs. Manufacturer Financing: Which Is Best?

Most car buyers accept the financing offered by the dealership’s finance and insurance (F&I) department without comparison shopping. This is one of the most expensive financing mistakes you can make.

🏦 Bank or Credit Union Financing

Best Strategy
Get pre-approved before visiting the dealer. You walk in knowing your rate and maximum loan amount. This gives you negotiating power and prevents the dealer from marking up the rate. Credit unions typically offer lower rates than banks for auto loans.

🚗 Dealer (Captive) Financing

Watch Carefully
Manufacturer financing arms (Ford Motor Credit, Toyota Financial) sometimes offer promotional 0% or low-rate offers that genuinely beat the market. However, these often require top-tier credit and may come with fewer negotiating options on the vehicle price itself.

How to Use the Auto Finance Calculator to Prepare for Dealership Negotiations

The most powerful way to use this calculator is not to calculate a single scenario — it is to run multiple scenarios and understand the boundaries of a deal before you negotiate.

  1. Find the vehicle’s market value first. Use sources like Edmunds, KBB, or CarGurus to establish the fair purchase price for the specific vehicle before opening the calculator.
  2. Get pre-approved for a loan. Apply at your bank or credit union for pre-approval. Note your approved rate and maximum loan amount.
  3. Enter the full deal into our calculator. Include the fair purchase price, your pre-approved rate, desired term, your down payment, trade-in situation, your state’s sales tax rate, and typical registration fees.
  4. Calculate your target monthly payment. This is your anchor — the payment that corresponds to a fair price, fair rate, and reasonable term.
  5. At the dealership, state your out-the-door price target first. Negotiate the vehicle price to your target before discussing financing.
  6. Verify the dealer’s payment quote against your calculator. If the dealer quotes a higher payment than your calculator produces with the agreed price and your pre-approved rate, ask specifically what has changed — a higher rate, added products, or extended term.

Common Auto Finance Mistakes That Cost Buyers Thousands

1. Negotiating Around the Monthly Payment

When buyers focus on a monthly payment target (“I can afford $500/month”), dealers can manipulate the term, rate, or even the vehicle price to hit that number while hiding where the money goes. Always anchor negotiations to the vehicle’s out-the-door price, never to a payment amount.

2. Accepting the Dealer’s First Rate Quote

Dealers are often authorised to mark up the interest rate they receive from lenders — this is called the “dealer reserve” or “dealer markup.” A lender approves you at 7%, the dealer quotes you 9%, and pockets the difference as profit. Having a pre-approved rate from your own bank eliminates this markup entirely or gives you leverage to match or beat it.

3. Rolling Negative Equity Without Understanding the Impact

Adding $5,000 in negative equity from your old loan into a new 72-month loan at 9% doesn’t just add $5,000 to your debt — it adds $5,000 plus 72 months of interest on that $5,000. The actual cost of rolling that negative equity is closer to $7,000. Always calculate the full impact using our tool before agreeing to roll negative equity.

4. Skipping the Amortization Schedule Review

In the early months of a car loan, the majority of each payment goes toward interest. This means that if you plan to sell or trade in the car in 2–3 years, you will have paid down surprisingly little principal. Review the amortization schedule in our calculator to see exactly how much you will owe at any future point — critical information for anyone who might not keep the car for the full loan term.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good APR for an auto loan in 2025?
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In 2025, average new car auto loan rates range from approximately 5–8% for buyers with good credit (700+) and 9–16%+ for subprime borrowers. A “good” rate is anything at or below the average for your credit tier. Super-prime borrowers (750+) should target rates below 6.5%. If you are offered a rate above 10% and have good credit, shop with competing lenders before accepting. Pre-approval from a credit union is often the most effective way to secure a competitive rate.
How much should my down payment be for a car?
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The standard financial advice is to put down at least 20% on a new car and 10% on a used car. A larger down payment reduces your financed amount, lowering both your monthly payment and total interest. It also immediately creates positive equity — meaning the car is worth more than you owe — which protects you from being underwater if the car depreciates quickly. Use our calculator to compare scenarios with different down payment amounts and see the exact savings in interest.
Is a 72-month or 84-month car loan a bad idea?
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Long loan terms (72–84 months) are increasingly common but carry serious risks. First, they dramatically increase total interest paid. Second, because cars depreciate quickly, you will likely be “underwater” (owing more than the car is worth) for the first 2–4 years of an 84-month loan — leaving you financially trapped if you need to sell or trade in. Third, long terms encourage borrowing more than you can truly afford. If you need an 84-month term to make a payment fit your budget, the vehicle is likely more expensive than your finances support.
Should I finance through the dealer or my own bank?
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The safest approach is to secure pre-approval from your own bank or credit union before visiting the dealer. This gives you a known rate as a benchmark and eliminates the risk of dealer rate markup. Once at the dealership, you can compare the dealer’s best offer against your pre-approved rate and choose whichever is lower. The exception is promotional manufacturer financing (0% or very low APR offers), which can genuinely beat independent lender rates — but always verify these are available for your credit tier and the specific vehicle before assuming they apply to you.
How does sales tax affect my auto loan?
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In most US states, sales tax is applied to the vehicle price and is typically financed as part of the loan (rather than paid in cash upfront). This means you pay interest on the tax amount over the life of the loan, increasing the effective cost. For example, 8% sales tax on a $35,000 vehicle adds $2,800 in tax. Over a 60-month loan at 7.5%, financing that $2,800 costs approximately an additional $560 in interest. Our calculator includes the sales tax field so your payment estimate reflects this real-world impact.
What fees should I expect to pay when buying a car?
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Standard legitimate fees include: title and registration fees (typically $100–$400 depending on your state), documentation fees (“doc fees,” typically $100–$500 — negotiable in some states), and destination charges on new cars (manufacturer-set, typically $1,000–$1,500, non-negotiable). Dealer add-ons that are often heavily marked up and sometimes misleadingly presented as required include: VIN etching, paint protection, fabric protection, extended warranties, and GAP insurance. All of these are optional and can be declined or sourced elsewhere at a lower cost.
What is GAP insurance and do I need it?
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GAP (Guaranteed Asset Protection) insurance covers the difference between what your car is worth and what you owe on the loan if the car is totalled or stolen. It is most relevant if you put less than 20% down, have a long loan term (72–84 months), or rolled negative equity from a previous loan — all situations where you are likely to be underwater early in the loan. Dealers typically charge $600–$1,000 for GAP insurance. Your own auto insurer usually offers the same coverage for $20–$40 per year added to your premium. Always compare before accepting the dealer’s offer.

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