Every prepayment on a long-term loan kills future interest. But where you apply it matters: a $20,000 prepayment in year 2 of a 30-year mortgage saves dramatically more than the same prepayment in year 25. This calculator quantifies the savings — and helps you choose between reducing tenure (max savings) or reducing EMI (cash-flow relief).
Loan Prepayment Calculator
See how much interest you save by prepaying — and whether to reduce tenure or EMI.
Prepayment Savings
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Reduce Tenure vs Reduce EMI
Reduce tenure (default): EMI stays the same, but the loan finishes years earlier. This saves the most interest because the loan is alive for less time.
Reduce EMI: Tenure stays the same, monthly EMI drops. Useful if cash flow is tight, but you save less total interest.
The Math
New Balance = Outstanding − Prepayment
Reduce-Tenure New n = log(EMI / (EMI − newBal × r)) / log(1 + r)
Reduce-EMI New EMI = newBal × r × (1+r)n / ((1+r)n − 1)
Worked Example
Should You Prepay or Invest?
Compare your after-tax loan rate to your after-tax expected investment return.
- Loan rate 8%, marginal tax saving on interest 25% → after-tax loan cost ≈ 6%.
- Investment expected return 12%, capital-gains tax 15% → after-tax return ≈ 10.2%.
- In this case investing wins by ~4%. But this is the math — psychologically, debt-free trumps a small return premium for many people.
Best Practices
- Prepay early. The first 5 years of any 20+ year loan are when most of the interest is paid — that’s when prepayments hurt the bank the most.
- Maintain emergency fund first. 6 months of expenses in cash before extra prepayments.
- Check prepayment fees. Floating-rate loans usually have 0% fees; fixed-rate loans 2–3%.
- Combine partial prepayments + step-up EMI for compound savings.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a fee for prepaying?▾
How often can I prepay?▾
Should I prepay or invest the surplus?▾
What if I can prepay only small amounts monthly?▾
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