Example personal loan repayments by amount, rate and term
A calculator is useful because it lets you test your own numbers, but it also helps to see how different combinations can behave in the real world.
A smaller loan amount can still become expensive if the rate is high, the term is long, or ongoing fees keep building over time. On the other hand, a larger loan can sometimes remain manageable if the rate is competitive, the term suits your budget and you are able to make extra repayments.
That is why we suggest comparing at least three scenarios before you make an enquiry: your ideal amount and term, a lower loan amount, and a shorter term with a higher monthly repayment. The goal is not just to find a repayment that looks comfortable this month. It is to understand how the full structure of the loan affects what you repay over time.
Useful when the borrowing need is smaller and the borrower wants to clear the balance quickly.
$318 / monthA middle-ground scenario that helps show how cost and flexibility can change together.
$543 / monthShows how a longer term can reduce the regular repayment while still increasing total interest.
$717 / monthHow personal loan repayments are calculated
A standard personal loan repayment usually covers both principal and interest. Early in the life of the loan, a larger share of each repayment often goes toward interest. As the balance reduces, more of each repayment goes toward paying down the principal.
That means two loans can have a similar monthly repayment while still costing very different amounts overall. The total cost depends on the interest rate, the term, the fee structure and whether the borrower makes extra repayments. Fees matter here too. If you enter an upfront fee or monthly fee into the calculator, the result becomes much closer to the way the loan may feel in practice.
If you ignore fees, you can end up comparing two products as though they are more similar than they really are. That is why we recommend reviewing the repayment amount, total interest, total fees and total repayment together instead of letting one number do all the work.
How to use this calculator to compare loans properly
The best way to use this calculator is to compare like with like.
Start with the same loan amount and the same term. Then change only one variable at a time. Test what happens when the rate changes. Test what happens when a monthly fee is added. Test what happens when you shorten the term or add an extra repayment.
A smart comparison usually means checking:
- repayment amount
- total repayment
- total interest
- total fees
- interest saved with extra repayments
If you want the result to be as realistic as possible, include any known fees instead of comparing rate alone. Then use the comparison pages on this site to see which selected products look worth exploring further.
What changes the result most?
In most scenarios, the biggest swings come from the rate, the loan term and whether a monthly fee is present. A slightly lower rate can still lose to a higher-fee product. A longer term can make the repayment look easier while increasing total interest. That is why the calculator works best as a comparison tool, not just a budgeting shortcut.
How extra repayments can cut interest
Extra repayments can make a bigger difference than many borrowers expect. Even a modest additional amount paid regularly can shorten the term of the loan and reduce the interest paid over time.
That said, extra repayments are not automatically free on every product. Some lenders are more flexible than others, and some loans can include early repayment or related charges. That is why we suggest checking the product details carefully instead of assuming every loan works the same way.
If you know you are the kind of borrower who likes to get ahead on repayments, test a few extra-repayment scenarios in the calculator and then compare products that allow that flexibility. A loan that looks slightly more expensive at first glance can sometimes be the better fit if it gives you more room to reduce interest later.
How much can you borrow with a personal loan?
Borrowing power tools can be helpful, but they should be treated as rough estimates rather than a lender decision.
A lender may look at your income, living expenses, debts, credit history, employment details and the amount and term you are applying for. This calculator cannot know all of those details, and it does not assess whether a particular lender would approve the application.
What it can do is help you work backwards from a realistic repayment budget. If a certain monthly repayment feels too tight in the calculator, that is a useful sign long before you reach the application stage. It helps you test the structure first, so you can compare the market with better expectations and less guesswork.
Compare personal loans after you calculate
Once you have tested a few scenarios, move from the calculator to the comparison pages. That is where you can line up selected products by interest rate, comparison rate, fees and features, and decide which loan types or providers are worth looking at more closely.
Good next steps: