Accurate Amortization Calculator
Introduction to Amortization
Create a printable amortization schedule that includes payment dates and annual subtotals. The schedule shows how much principal and interest you will pay over the life of the loan. The calculator can calculate any one unknown value: the payment amount, loan amount, interest rate, or loan term.
- What is an amortization schedule?
- An amortization schedule is a table that shows a loan’s complete repayment plan. It lists each payment, detailing how much is applied to the loan’s principal and how much to interest, along with the remaining loan balance. Ideally, the schedule includes payment dates, and year-end subtotals.
- How do I create an amortization schedule?
- Leave all inputs and settings at their default values, then:
- Enter the Loan Amount.
- Enter the expected Number of Payments.
- Set the anticipated closing date and the first payment due date.
- Enter the expected Annual Interest Rate.
- Set the Payment Amount to 0.
(This tells the calculator to solve for the payment amount.) - Click either or .
- Leave all inputs and settings at their default values, then:
That’s it. These are the only steps needed to generate your schedule.
If your loan terms differ from the calculator’s default settings, additional options are available.
Keep reading. The following sections explain each option in more detail. More…
Create an amortization schedule with user-specified dates.
To set your preferred currency and date format, click the “$ : MM/DD/YYYY” link in the lower right corner of any calculator.
Information
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Useful Details —
They Will Help You Get What You Need
First — You must enter a zero (0) in any field where you want the calculator to solve for a value.
Why is this necessary?
The calculator generates a schedule based on the loan terms you specify. The payment amount can be any value, as long as both the lender and borrower agree. There is no single “correct” payment. If the calculator always solved for the previously unknown value, this feature would not be possible.
TIP — Use the amortization schedule to verify the periodic interest charges. These interest values are the most important amounts for borrowers to double-check.
Four values you must always set:
- Loan Amount — The total amount borrowed, also called the principal. This value does not include interest.
- Number of Payments (term) — The length of the loan, measured in payment periods. This value depends on the Payment Frequency setting. For example, for a 15-year loan with biweekly payments, enter 390 as the number of payments.
(390 biweekly payments = 15 years) - Annual Interest Rate — The nominal (quoted) interest rate for the loan.
- Payment Amount — The amount due on each payment date. For a standard amortizing loan, this value includes both principal and interest.
Set one of the values above to 0 if you want the calculator to solve for it.
What two dates are critical for an accurate amortization schedule?
If you only need an estimated schedule, you can skip this section.
For a schedule that is accurate down to the penny—including correct calculation of stub period interest—it is worth taking a few moments to understand the available date settings.
- Loan Closing Date
- This is the date the loan funds become available. It is also called the origination date, loan date, or start date.
- First Payment Due
- This is the date the first payment is scheduled. For most loans, payments typically begin after the loan funds are received. For leases, this date may be the same as the loan closing date.
Important — Entering actual dates may result in interest and payment calculations that differ from those of other calculators.
That is by design.
However, if you want your results to match those from other calculators, then set the "Loan Date" and "First Payment Due" so that the time between them equals one full period, based on the "Payment Frequency" setting.
Example: If the "Loan Closing Date" is April 10th and the "Payment Frequency" is "Monthly," then set the "First Payment Due" to May 10th—if you want to estimate interest based on one full month.
More details about stub period options, including odd-day and irregular-period interest.
Four loan options you likely do not need to change
- Payment Period or Frequency — How often should payments be made? The calculator supports 11 options, including biweekly, monthly, and semiannual (commonly used for bond coupon schedules). Payment dates are calculated starting from the first payment due date, not the closing date.
- Compounding Period or Frequency — In most cases, the compounding frequency should match the payment frequency. This results in simple periodic interest. Selecting Exact/Simple calculates interest based on exact day counts using a simple interest method.
- Points — One point equals 1% of the loan amount. Points are commonly applied to U.S. mortgages.Learn more about points, fees, and APR support.
- Amortization Method — Leave this set to normal unless you have a specific reason to change it.See all nine amortization methods.
Five loan settings you may want to adjust

These options are available by clicking Settings.
- 360 / 365 / 366 — Days-per-year setting. Also called the day count convention, this affects interest calculations when you select a day-based compounding method (such as daily, exact/simple, or continuous), or when the loan includes an irregular first period. The 366-day option applies in leap years. Otherwise, 365 is used.
- Payment & Initial Period Interest Options — Controls how interest is calculated and displayed when the first period (from closing date to first payment) is longer or shorter than the standard interval.More details and examples.
- Last Period Rounding Options — Because payments and interest are rounded to the nearest cent (e.g., $345.0457 is rounded to $345.05), most loans require a rounding adjustment in the final period. A note on the schedule will show the exact adjustment.
- Points, Charges, & APR Options —Learn more about loan schedules with points, fees, and APR options.
- Year-End Month — Sets the month after which year-end and running totals are calculated. This is helpful for businesses with a fiscal year that does not match the calendar year.
FAQs — Frequently Asked Questions
- How do I calculate how much I can borrow?
- Set the Loan Amount to 0.
- Enter the Number of Payments.
- Enter the Annual Interest Rate.
- Enter the expected or target Payment Amount.
- Click or .
- How do I calculate how long it will take to pay off a loan?
- Enter the Loan Amount.
- Set the Number of Payments to 0.
- Enter the Annual Interest Rate.
- Enter the expected or target Payment Amount.
- Click or .
- What interest rate allows me to pay $500 a month?
- Enter the Loan Amount.
- Enter the Number of Payments.
- Set the Annual Interest Rate to 0.
- Enter $500 as the Payment Amount.
- Click or .
Printing the Payment Schedule
Printing works from any type of device. For example, you can print a clean, well-formatted schedule directly from a smartphone to a wireless printer.(This functionality was tested on various iPhone models printing to an HP LaserJet Pro.)
Do not use your browser’s built-in Print menu option.
Always print from the “Print Preview…” window. This screen includes a print button, along with export buttons for .docx and .xlsx formats.
If you’re using a modern browser, you can also print to a PDF. For example, in Chrome, open the browser menu (three vertical dots), choose Print…, then click Change… and select Save as PDF. Other browsers offer similar functionality.
If you encounter printing issues, please let us know which browser and version you’re using. While we test across several browsers, we are unable to test with all printer models (unless you’d like to donate one!).

(Chrome, Edge, and Firefox all offer a “Save to PDF” option in their print menus.)
How do I create Excel (.xlsx) or Word (.docx) amortization schedules?
From the Print Preview screen (after the title page), you’ll see options to export the full amortization schedule as either an Excel (.xlsx) or Word (.docx) file. When exporting to Excel, the schedule is saved as unformatted data. Dates and numbers are preserved as true Excel date and number values—not text—so you can apply your own formatting.
When exporting to Word, the schedule is formatted for readability. You can edit the document freely, adding notes or customizing fonts, styles, and layout as needed. (In our opinion, the Word export is more visually refined than the version printed directly using the print button.)
Amortization Equations
Payment Amount Equation
Fig. 4 — Step-by-step solution of the monthly payment amount equation.
Variables: L = 50,000
; c = (5% ÷ 12 months)
; n = 60
.
Variable Definitions
- P
- Payment amount
- L
- Loan amount
- n
- Number of months. The term of the loan.
- c
- Monthly interest rate (nominal annual rate divided by 12).
Calculation Steps
- Substitute the given values into the annuity payment formula:
P = 50,000 × ( (r/n)(1 + r/n)60 ) ÷ ( (1 + r/n)60 – 1 )
, withr = 0.05
andn = 12
. - Evaluate the periodic rate:
r/n = 0.05/12 ≈ 0.0041666666667…
, and substitute it into the formula. - Simplify the base term:
(1 + 0.0041666666667…) ≈ 1.0041666666667…
, keeping the exponent of 60 in both the numerator and denominator. - Compute the fraction:
(0.0041666666667… × (1.0041666666667…)60) ÷ ((1.0041666666667…)60 – 1) ≈ 0.018871233644…
, then multiply by 50,000. - Round the payment to two decimal places for reporting:
P ≈ $943.56
.
Step-by-step Solution – Fig. 4
P = 50,000 × ( (0.05/12)(1 + 0.05/12)60 ) ÷ ( (1 + 0.05/12)60 – 1 )
≈ 50,000 × ( (0.0041666666667…)(1 + 0.0041666666667…)60 ) ÷ ( (1 + 0.0041666666667…)60 – 1 )
≈ 50,000 × ( (0.0041666666667…)(1.0041666666667…)60 ) ÷ ( (1.0041666666667…)60 – 1 )
≈ 50,000 × 0.018871233644…
≈ 943.56
Final Answer
The final answer (P) is approximately 943.56.
Validate the calculator. Inputs for a six-year amortization.
Loan Amount: | $50,000.00 | Number of Payments: | 60 |
---|---|---|---|
Annual Interest Rate: | 5.0000% | Payment Amount: | =943.56 |
Loan Closing Date: | First Payment Due: | ||
Payment Frequency: | Monthly | Compounding: | Monthly |
Points: | 0.0 | Amortization Method: | Normal |
Notes:
- This example uses the same calculation shown in Fig. 4.
- Enter a zero for the payment amount. The calculated result matches the result above.
- The “Days In Year” setting has no effect in this example because the period spans exactly sixty months with no extra days.
Amortization Equation
Fig. 6 — Step-by-step solution of the normal (general) amortization equation.
Variables: L = 50,000
; R = 5%
; n = 60
; A = 943.56
(See Fig. 4).
Normal amortization, for any period: ending balance = beginning balance + periodic interest − payment.
Variable Definitions
- R
- Nominal annual interest rate.
- i
- Periodic interest rate.
- I
- Periodic interest amount.
- r
- Growth factor per period (also called the per-period accumulation factor).
- t
- Period number.
- Pt-1
- Outstanding balance at the start of period t.
- Pt
- Outstanding balance at the end of period t.
- L
- Loan amount.
- n
- Number of months. The term of the loan.
- A
- Monthly payment amount.
Calculation Steps
- Compute the periodic rate:
i = 0.05/12 ≈ 0.00416666666…
. - Compute the per-period growth factor:
r = 1 + i ≈ 1.00416666666…
. - Set the period:
t = 1
. - Start-of-period balance:
Pt−1 = 50,000
. - Accumulate interest for the period:
50,000 × r ≈ 50,208.33333…
. - Round the accumulated balance for display:
≈ 50,208.33
. - Interest for the period:
I = 50,208.33 − 50,000 = 208.33
. - Subtract the payment to get the end-of-period balance:
Pt = 50,208.33 − 943.56 = 49,264.77
.
Step-by-step Solution – Fig. 6 (first period)
i = 0.05/12 ≈ 0.00416666666…
r = 1 + i ≈ 1.00416666666…
t = 1
Pt−1 = 50,000
= 50,000 × 1.00416666666… ≈ 50,208.33333…
≈ 50,208.33
I = 50,208.33 − 50,000 = 208.33
Pt = 50,208.33 − 943.56 = 49,264.77
Validate the calculator. Five-year, sixty-month amortization schedule proof.
#/Year | Date | Payment | Interest | Principal | Balance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Loan start | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 50,000.00 | |
1:1 | 943.56 | 208.33 | 735.23 | 49,264.77 | |
2:1 | 943.56 | 205.27 | 738.29 | 48,526.48 | |
Periods 3–59: Intermediate calculations. | |||||
59:5 | 939.75 | ||||
60:5 | 943.56 | 3.92 | 939.64 | 0.11 | |
Without any final rounding, a $0.11 principal balance remains. | |||||
60:5 (final adjustment) | 943.67 | 3.92 | 939.75 | 0.00 | |
Last payment increased by $0.11 due to interest rounding. |
Notes:
- The results in the above table are taken from the calculator. They match the calculation shown in Fig. 6.
Beyond Basic Amortization Schedules
Need more options?
Explore seven additional loan amortization calculators
- Mortgage Calculator — estimate future home value and compare it to the total mortgage cost
- Extra Payment Calculator — apply lump-sum or recurring extra payments with a full amortization schedule
- Loan Calculator — includes support for date-based calculations in a mobile-friendly layout
- Auto Loan Calculator — evaluate the full cost of vehicle ownership
- Biweekly Calculator — compare a biweekly schedule to a standard monthly repayment in a single view
- Ultimate Financial Calculator — build schedules with skipped payments, rate changes, and more advanced conditions
- Loan Payoff Calculator — track regular or irregular payments on any date
We hope you find this to be a comprehensive amortization tool. If you need help with a specific scenario or are not sure how to achieve your result, feel free to leave a question in the comments section below.
Andrea Broussard says:
Would someone please tell how do I get this calculator for use on my website. Is it free or needs to be purchased. If either or please advise.
Respectfully,
Karl says:
This calculator is not available for other websites at this time.
Please use the link to the loan calculator that I just provided on the plugin page.
CHERYL A PELOQUIN says:
HOW DO I DO $480,000 FOR 6 MONTHS INTEREST ONLY, THEN DO AMORTIZATION ON BALANCE?
Karl says:
Use this calculator. You can see these tutorials. #14 is about an initial interest only series.
P.McKay says:
What Calculator do I use for interest only payments (with possible additional principal payments), interest figured on date paid, with possible draw options thru the loan?
Karl says:
Use the Ultimate Financial Calculator. You can see these tutorials. #14 is about an initial interest only series. There are other tutorials (specifically #25) about making payments on any date.
Tyson says:
How do I set the calculator to adjust the final payment rather than the first? I have set the rounding correction to be on the final payment, but the schedule still changes my first payment as well.
Karl says:
You didn’t give me enough details to give you a specific answer. But, under "Settings", you’ll see "Long/Short Period Options". These options control the payment and interest for the first period. If your first period is a longer duration than the other periods, you might want to pick "Amortized" If you still need assistance, please provide ALL the loan specifics.
Steven Veldkamp says:
When going 45 days to first payment, is there a way to have the calculator “roll” the first interest only payment into the payments? I would like to calculate without the first interest only payment. Thanks!
Karl says:
Yes. Under "Settings", select "Long/Short Period Options". You’ll want to pick "With First."
Teresa Bland says:
My father holds several mortgages and his borrowers often pay late, miss payments all together, or pay lower amounts than due, then sometimes pay extra in an attempt to get caught up. Is it possible for me to save the amortization schedule so that I can just add the payment (or missing payment plus late fee) each month.
Karl says:
Yes, but you need to use a different calculator.
Pleases see this loan payoff calculator. This calculator allows users to track payments, for any amount, as they are paid.
Matt says:
I’m looking to set up an amortization that has 308 daily payments on weekdays only. Is that possible?
Karl says:
Not with the amortization schedule, but you can with the Ultimate Financial Calculator.
For "Cash Flow Options", you’ll want to set up a "Skip Series" to avoid the weekend days.
Note the link on the above page to the various tutorials. Also, if you have any questions, you can post them there.
Larry says:
Lovely work. Amortization schedule is sometimes some pennies off compared to what financial calculators (and Excel) produce. Example:
2,000,000 loan
12% interest
360 payments
payment amount 20,572.26 (one penny higher than calculated amount).
Payment 83 interest should be 19,278.23, not 19,278.22 (The exact amount of interest is $19,278.225 which be rounded up not truncated).
The problem may be due to not rounding the balance to the penny when the row is calculated. If the resulting balance is minutely under the “exact” value the subsequent calculated interest might be off a penny.
OK, fine point but I personally believe all amortization schedules should use rules that produce exactly the same results (to the penny) for identical inputs. Yes, I know they don’t! And it might not be possible to avoid all rounding errors.
Karl says:
Thanks for your commment. I appreciate it.
I assume you saw that the calculator lets you set the payment amount, so you can use $20,572.26. Any payment amount is fine as long as the lender and borrower agree to it.
With respect to rounding, I think I have it set for "round-to-even" or sometimes known as Banker’s rounding – but I would have to check that. 1/2 is rounded to the nearest even value.
Karl says:
As a side note, a 20,572.25 payment amount seems to be more accurate than a 20,572.26 amount.
If interested, take a look at the schedule using the print preview button and scroll down to the footnote. If you use the 20,572.25 amount, the final payment only requires a 6.95 final rounding adjustment, while the 20,572.26 payment requires a 20.16 final adjustment.
What also is interesting (I think), the banker’s rounding (rounding to even) leads to a greater "error" than conventional rounding in this example. Conventional rounding, with a 20,572.26 payment results in a 20.0 final adjustment.
As you might say, all fine points.
Johnny says:
Can this calculator support a residual payment at the end?
For example, 60 instalment of $1,000 monthly repayment and one $9,000 residual payment at the end.
Please advise. Thanks.
Karl says:
It can. What happened when you entered the initial loan amount, 60 periods, the interest rate, and the $1,000 monthly payment. The final payment (#62) would be the residual (or as I call it, balloon payment).
If you try it and don’t get the results you expect, let me know what’s not right for you. There are other calculators the might meet your needs.
Johnny says:
Thanks. I still can’t get it. The interest rate is unknown. I just know the initial loan amount, no of payment and amount and balloon payment. Please advise. Thanks.
Karl says:
I assume then you know the loan amount?
If so, then use this balloon payment calculator.
You’ll enter "0" for the interest rate, the loan amount, the number of 1,000 payments (i.e. 60), the "periodic payment amount" (1,000) and then the balloon payment (9,000). It will calculate the interest rate for you.
Mark Dubay says:
Hi. Interested in creating an amortization schedule for a business we are selling. Would be amortizing two million dollars for ten years. Easy enough. However are there any calculators that could create an amortization schedule with escalating payments? Would like to offer the buyer lower payments in the first three years and then have them increase. I understand we could go with balloon payments but we feel a more comfortably way for the buyer to purchase would be lower payments in the beginning while they become comfortable with operating the company. Company continues to show growth and has for the past ten years.
Thanks very much, Mark
Karl says:
Sure, easy enough.
Please use Ultimate Financial Calculator. You can add or create a special series with either a percent step or an amount step (under "Cash Flow Options"). Take your pick. The change can happen when you want them to happen. Scroll down the page and click on "Tutorials" for details.
Mark Dubay says:
Hi Karl. Thanks so much for the speedy response! Did not see the link before that you have sent. Will begin on Monday.
Mark