Auto Loan Calculator
An auto loan calculator estimates monthly payments after the down payment, trade-in, taxes, and fees. Use it to compare vehicle prices, loan terms, and interest rates before shopping for financing.
Quick answer
The vehicle price is only one part of the cost. Taxes, fees, trade-in value, down payment, APR, and loan term all affect the amount financed and monthly payment.
Calculator
How to use this calculator
- Enter the negotiated vehicle price.
- Add the down payment, trade-in credit, tax rate, and fees.
- Enter the loan APR and number of months.
- Review the payment, amount financed, interest, and total cost.
Explanation
What it is
An auto loan calculator estimates monthly payments after the down payment, trade-in, taxes, and fees. Use it to compare vehicle prices, loan terms, and interest rates before shopping for financing.
How it works
The amount financed equals price plus estimated sales tax and fees, minus the down payment and trade-in. The payment then uses the standard fixed-rate amortization formula.
When to use it
Use this calculator to compare realistic scenarios before making a financial decision, and update the inputs when rates, costs, income, or goals change.
Limitations
- The result is an estimate based only on the inputs and assumptions shown.
- It does not evaluate eligibility, product terms, market conditions, or personal legal and tax circumstances.
- Actual outcomes can differ because of fees, timing, rounding, taxes, and provider-specific methods.
Key terms
- Amount financed
- The balance borrowed after upfront credits and added costs.
- Trade-in value
- Credit received for a vehicle exchanged at purchase.
- APR
- Annual percentage rate used to compare borrowing cost.
- Loan term
- The number of months scheduled for repayment.
- Negative equity
- The amount owed on a trade-in above its value, when rolled into a new loan.
Formula
The amount financed equals price plus estimated sales tax and fees, minus the down payment and trade-in. The payment then uses the standard fixed-rate amortization formula.
Worked example
For a $38,000 vehicle, the calculator adds estimated tax and fees, subtracts down payment and trade-in value, then amortizes the financed amount over the selected term.
FAQ
How much is a $38,000 car payment?
The payment depends on the down payment, trade-in, taxes, fees, APR, and term. Comparing the amount financed is more useful than looking at sticker price alone.
Is a 72-month car loan a bad idea?
A longer term can lower the payment but usually increases interest and may keep the loan balance above the vehicle value for longer.
Should I put money down on a car?
A down payment reduces the amount financed and may reduce interest and negative-equity risk. Keep enough cash for emergencies and ownership costs.
Does sales tax apply before or after the trade-in?
Rules vary by state. Some states reduce the taxable amount by trade-in value; others do not. This calculator uses a simplified tax-on-price assumption.
What fees are included in an auto loan?
Possible costs include title, registration, documentation, destination, dealer add-ons, and lender fees. Review the purchase agreement carefully.
Can I pay off an auto loan early?
Many loans allow early payoff, but confirm how interest is calculated and whether the contract includes a prepayment penalty.
Common mistakes
- Negotiating only the monthly payment.
- Ignoring taxes, fees, insurance, and depreciation.
- Rolling negative equity into a new loan without measuring it.
- Choosing a long term that exceeds the planned ownership period.
Tips
- Negotiate vehicle price before financing.
- Compare bank, credit union, and dealer offers.
- Include ownership costs in the budget.
- Avoid stretching the term only to reach a target payment.
Sources and editorial review
Educational estimates only; not personalized financial, tax, legal, lending, investment, or insurance advice.