Car Loan Payment Calculator
Enter the car’s price, your down payment, the interest rate, and the loan length — and see both your monthly payment and the number dealers rarely mention: the total interest you will pay before the car is actually yours.
Compare 36 vs 60 vs 72 months — watch the total interest, not just the payment.
How to Use the Car Loan Calculator
- Get a real interest rate quote first — rates for young, first-time borrowers are usually higher than advertised rates.
- Run the same car at 36, 48, and 60 months and compare the total interest, not just the monthly payment.
- Add your down payment last and watch how much of the interest disappears.
Try This
Take any car you have been eyeing and stretch the loan from 36 to 72 months. The monthly payment looks friendlier — and the total cost quietly grows by hundreds or thousands. A longer loan is not a cheaper car; it is a more expensive car that feels cheaper.
A Teacher’s Tips
The payment is only part of the cost: insurance for new drivers, gas, and maintenance often add as much as the loan payment itself. A rule of thumb that keeps students out of trouble: total car costs should stay under about 15–20% of your take-home pay.
Car Loan FAQ
Should I finance my first car at all?
If you can buy a reliable used car with cash, that is almost always the better first move — no interest, no monthly obligation, and cheaper insurance. Finance only what you genuinely need.
Why is my quoted rate higher than the ads?
Advertised rates assume long credit histories. As a first-time borrower you have not built one yet — which is normal, and one more reason to keep the loan small and short.
Does a bigger down payment really matter?
Yes, twice over: you borrow less (less interest) and you are less likely to owe more than the car is worth as it depreciates.
Keep Going
Before you shop, read the full guide to buying your first car — it covers the costs most first-time buyers miss.


