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//// Financial · Auto Loan

Car Loan Calculator

Enter the vehicle price, down payment, trade-in, APR, and term — get your monthly payment, total interest, true out-of-pocket cost, and a full amortization schedule showing how each payment splits between principal and interest.

Where this fits

This tool lives inside Cash Flow and is most useful for founders and households.

401(k) Limit 2024$23,000
Roth IRA Limit$7,000
S&P 500 Avg Return~10%/yr

Loan Details

$
$
$
% tax
% / yr
Monthly Payment

$505.76

60-month term

Total Interest

$5,105

on $25,240 financed

Total Cost

$35,345

payments + $5,000 down

Cost Breakdown

Principal (Financed)$25,240
Interest Paid$5,105
Total of all payments$30,345

Amortization Schedule

MonthPaymentPrincipalInterestBalance
1$505.76$348.01$157.75$24,892
2$505.76$350.18$155.57$24,542
3$505.76$352.37$153.39$24,189
4$505.76$354.57$151.18$23,835
5$505.76$356.79$148.97$23,478
6$505.76$359.02$146.74$23,119
7$505.76$361.26$144.49$22,758
8$505.76$363.52$142.24$22,394
9$505.76$365.79$139.96$22,028
10$505.76$368.08$137.68$21,660
11$505.76$370.38$135.38$21,290
12$505.76$372.70$133.06$20,917
··· months 13–59 ···
60$505.76$502.62$3.14Paid off
1

Vehicle total cost with tax

taxedPrice = vehiclePrice × (1 + salesTax%)

= $28,000 × (1 + 8%)

= $30,240 ($2,240 in sales tax)

Sales tax in most states applies to the full vehicle price before trade-in or down payment. On a $28,000 car, 8% tax adds $2,240 — a cost often overlooked when budgeting.

Standard US vehicle sales tax treatment — applied to vehicle price, then reduced by trade-in/down

2

Loan amount

loan = taxedPrice − downPayment − tradeIn

= $30,240 − $5,000 − $0

= $25,240

Your down payment and trade-in reduce the financed amount — every dollar here saves 7.5% in annual interest. Your $5,000 in down + trade-in saves approximately $1,875 in interest over the loan term.

3

Monthly rate

r_month = APR / 12

= 7.5% / 12

= 0.6250%/month

APR (Annual Percentage Rate) is divided by 12 to get the monthly rate applied to your outstanding balance. At 7.5% APR, your effective monthly rate is 0.6250% — slightly different from the daily rate used in some loan structures.

FTC Truth in Lending Act (TILA) — Regulation Z APR disclosure

4

Monthly payment (PMT formula)

PMT = P × r / (1 − (1 + r)^−n)

P = $25,240, r = 0.6250%/mo, n = 60 mo

= $505.76/month

This is the standard loan amortization formula — each payment covers that month's interest charge, with the remainder reducing principal. Early payments are mostly interest; later payments are mostly principal.

Time value of money annuity formula — Brealey, Myers & Allen; standard amortization (Wikipedia, Khan Academy)

5

Month 1 interest vs principal split

M1_interest = loanAmount × r_month

= $25,240 × 0.6250% = $157.75

= $157.75 interest · $348.01 principal (31.2% of first payment is interest)

In month 1, 31.2% of your payment is pure interest cost. That interest portion decreases each month as you pay down the balance — this is front-loading, the most expensive part of any amortizing loan.

6

Total paid and total interest

totalPaid = PMT × months · totalInterest = totalPaid − loan

= $505.76 × 60 − $25,240

= $30,345 total paid · $5,105 interest (20.2% of loan)

You pay $5,105 in interest — 20.2% of the original loan amount — in addition to repaying the $25,240 principal. This is the cost of borrowing money over 5 years at 7.5% APR.

7

Effective out-of-pocket cost

effectiveCost = totalPaid + downPayment

= $30,345 + $5,000

= $35,345

Your true cost of the vehicle is $35,345 — not $28,000. The $7,345 difference represents sales tax, interest, and financing costs. This is the number that matters when comparing buying vs. leasing vs. buying used.

8

Loan payoff midpoint

midpoint = month where cumulative principal = 50% of loan

= month 33 of 60

= You owe 50% of principal after month 33 (2.8 years)

Due to front-loaded interest, it takes until month 33 — more than halfway through the loan — before you've paid off half the principal. This is why selling or trading in early often leaves you "underwater" (owing more than the car is worth).

9

36-month payoff comparison

PMT_36 = loan × r / (1 − (1 + r)^−36)

= $25,240 × 0.6250% / (1 − (1 + 0.6250%)^−36)

= $785.12/mo · saves $2,081 in interest vs 60-month

Shortening to 36 months raises your payment by $279.36/mo but eliminates $2,081 in total interest. If you can afford the higher payment, shorter terms always win on total cost.

10

Cost per mile (estimated)

cost/mile = effectiveCost / (12,000 mi/yr × termYears)

= $35,345 / 60,000 miles

= $0.59/mile financing cost over 5-year loan

At 12,000 miles/year, your financing cost alone runs $0.59/mile — before gas, insurance, maintenance, or depreciation. This is useful when comparing total vehicle cost with alternatives like ride-sharing or leasing.

11

Down payment opportunity cost

opp_cost = downPayment × ((1 + 7%/12)^n − 1)

= $5,000 × ((1 + 0.583%/mo)^60 − 1)

= $2,088 forgone if down payment were invested at 7%

Your $5,000 down payment, if invested in index funds at 7% annual return, would grow by $2,088 over the loan term. This doesn't mean you shouldn't put money down — the interest savings often exceed the opportunity cost — but it's worth knowing the true comparison.

Key insight

At 7.5% APR you pay 20.2% of the loan amount in interest — $5,105 on top of returning $25,240 in principal. Cutting to 36 months would raise your payment to $785.12/mo but save $2,081 in total interest. 5-year total cost of ownership (loan payments minus estimated residual value) is approximately $21,345 — the real cost of the vehicle beyond the sticker price.

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