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Monthly Payment Calculator

Calculate the monthly payment for any loan instantly. Enter loan amount, interest rate and term to compare payment options side by side.

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Monthly Payment
Total Interest
Total Amount

What is a Monthly Payment Calculator?

A Monthly Payment Calculator is a universal financial tool that computes the fixed monthly payment required to fully repay any instalment loan over a specified term. Unlike loan-specific calculators, this tool works across all loan types — personal loans, car loans, home loans, business loans, student loans, or any credit facility with regular monthly payments. It is the quickest way to standardise and compare loan offers from different lenders who may quote different terms and rates.

When comparing loan offers, lenders often present different combinations of interest rate and tenure to make their product appear attractive. This calculator cuts through that complexity — enter any combination of amount, rate, and term to instantly see the true monthly commitment. For type-specific calculations with additional inputs like down payment or property value, use our Mortgage Calculator or Car Loan Calculator. For the full month-by-month breakdown, our Loan Amortization Calculator provides the complete schedule.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter Loan Amount: The principal — the total amount you are borrowing or the remaining outstanding balance if you are mid-loan.
  2. Enter Annual Interest Rate: The yearly rate as quoted by your lender. Make sure it is the effective rate and not a flat rate, as these produce very different results.
  3. Enter Loan Term in Months: 12 months = 1 year, 24 = 2 years, 60 = 5 years, 120 = 10 years. Try multiple term lengths to find the payment that suits your budget.
  4. Click Calculate: Instantly compare monthly payments, total interest, and full repayment for your entered values.
💡 Comparison Tip: Run the calculator 3 times with the exact terms from 3 different lenders' offers. The one with the lowest total repayment (not just the lowest EMI) is the best deal overall.

Monthly Payment Formula

Payment = [ P × R × (1+R)^N ] ÷ [ (1+R)^N – 1 ]

Where: P = Principal, R = Monthly interest rate (annual ÷ 12 ÷ 100), N = Number of monthly payments.

How Payment Changes with Term

₹5,00,000 loan at 10% per annum:

TermMonthly PaymentTotal InterestTotal Repaid
12 months₹43,960₹27,520₹5,27,520
24 months₹23,073₹53,752₹5,53,752
36 months₹16,134₹80,824₹5,80,824
48 months₹12,685₹1,08,880₹6,08,880
60 months₹10,624₹1,37,440₹6,37,440

Using Monthly Payment Calculations for Financial Planning

The monthly payment figure is the most critical number in personal finance planning — it determines whether a loan fits your budget or not. Financial planners typically recommend the 28/36 rule: no more than 28% of gross monthly income on housing payments and no more than 36% on all debt payments combined. Use this calculator to test whether any proposed loan keeps you within these healthy debt ratios. For tracking and paying off existing debt efficiently, our Debt Payoff Calculator helps you sequence repayments to minimise total interest. For planning whether you can afford a home purchase given your current income and savings, combine this with our Down Payment Calculator to assess readiness before approaching a bank.

Flat Rate vs Reducing Balance — Why It Matters

This calculator uses the reducing balance method (also called the diminishing balance method), which is the standard used by all Indian banks and regulated lenders for retail loans. In the reducing balance method, interest is calculated on the outstanding loan amount each month, so your interest cost reduces as you repay. Some lenders, particularly for short-term lending and dealer financing, use a flat rate method where interest is calculated on the full original principal throughout the tenure. At the same stated rate, a flat rate loan always costs significantly more — the effective annual rate of a flat rate loan is approximately 1.8 times the stated rate. Use our Simple Interest Calculator to calculate flat rate loan costs and compare with reducing balance results from this tool to understand the true difference.

Frequently Asked Questions

Work backwards: decide the maximum monthly payment you can comfortably afford, then use this calculator to find what loan amount and tenure combination fits within that payment. For example, if you can afford ₹15,000 per month, try different principal amounts at your expected interest rate to find the maximum affordable loan.
After a prepayment, lenders typically either reduce your tenure (keeping the same EMI) or reduce your EMI (keeping the same tenure). Most financial advisors recommend choosing the reduced tenure option, as it saves more total interest. Recalculate with the new outstanding balance and remaining months to see your updated schedule.
No. A lower monthly payment achieved by extending the loan term always means higher total interest paid. The optimal payment is one that is comfortably affordable each month while keeping the total repayment (and total interest) at a reasonable level. Running this calculator with multiple term options shows the trade-off clearly.
Yes. The monthly payment formula works identically for business loans, working capital loans, equipment financing, and MSME loans. Simply enter the loan amount, the rate your lender has quoted, and the repayment term in months. The result gives you the monthly debt service obligation for cash flow planning.
During a moratorium, you may pay only interest (not principal) or no payment at all. After the moratorium ends, your EMI is recalculated on the outstanding balance (which may be higher than the original principal if interest was capitalised during the grace period) for the remaining tenure. Enter the post-moratorium balance and remaining months into this calculator to find your actual EMI after the moratorium ends.