APR Calculator Tool

True Annual Percentage Rate (APR)
7.24%
Stated rate: 7.00% | APR premium: +0.24%
$1,330
Monthly Payment
$278,980
Total Interest
$2,000
Total Fees

📊 Rate Breakdown

Stated Interest Rate 7.00%
True APR (with fees) 7.24%
Fee Impact (APR Premium) +0.24%

💰 Cost Summary

Loan Principal$200,000
Total Fees$2,000
Total Interest$278,980
Total Cost of Loan$480,980
Effective Monthly Cost$1,336

📈 APR Analysis

Stated Rate7.00%
True APR7.24%
APR Premium from Fees+0.24%
Fee % of Loan1.00%
Interest % of Total Cost58.0%

📅 Amortization Schedule (Annual Summary)

Year Payment Principal Interest Balance

🔵 Loan A

$
%
mo
$
APR7.28%
Monthly Payment$1,332
Total Interest + Fees$282,983

🟠 Loan B

$
%
mo
$
APR6.98%
Monthly Payment$1,297
Total Interest + Fees$274,890
Daily Interest Rate
0.0603%
22% APR ÷ 365 days = 0.0603% per day
1.833%
Monthly Rate
$91.67
First Month Interest
62 mo
Months to Pay Off

💰 Cost of Carrying Balance

Starting Balance$5,000
Total Interest Paid$3,807
Total Paid$8,807
Payoff Timeline5 yr 2 mo

💡 Payoff Tips

Double payment saves~$2,400+
Payoff date (current)Jul 2030
Interest saved if paid in 12 mo~$3,200
Payment needed for 12 mo$463

📊 What Is APR (Annual Percentage Rate)?

APR — Annual Percentage Rate — is the standardized measure of the total yearly cost of borrowing money, expressed as a percentage. Unlike the nominal interest rate, which reflects only the cost of the principal, APR incorporates all mandatory fees and finance charges that are folded into the loan — giving you a true, apples-to-apples view of what you're actually paying.

In the United States, the Truth in Lending Act (TILA) requires all lenders to disclose the APR before a borrower accepts a loan. This federal law exists specifically because interest rates alone can be misleading — a loan with a 6.5% rate and $5,000 in fees could be more expensive than a loan with a 7.0% rate and zero fees, depending on the loan term.

💡

Key rule: APR will always be equal to or higher than the stated interest rate. If the APR equals the interest rate, the loan has no fees. The larger the gap between interest rate and APR, the more fees the loan carries.

APR Types: What Our Calculator Covers

🏠

Mortgage APR

Includes origination fees, discount points, broker fees, PMI, and certain closing costs

Typical: 6.5–8.0%
🚗

Auto Loan APR

Covers interest plus dealer finance charges, documentation fees, and gap insurance

Typical: 5.0–14.0%
👤

Personal Loan APR

Interest plus origination fees (1–8%), application fees, and prepayment penalties

Typical: 8.0–36.0%
💳

Credit Card APR

Rate equals APR since card fees (annual, late, etc.) are not included by convention

Typical: 16.0–30.0%

⚙️ How Our APR Calculator Works

Our calculator uses two complementary methods to compute APR depending on your loan type:

  • Simple APR Method (quick estimate): Amortizes fees over the loan term and adds them to the effective interest cost. Best for quick comparisons.
  • IRR Method (precise): Uses the Internal Rate of Return (Newton-Raphson iteration) to solve for the exact monthly rate that makes the present value of all payments equal the effective loan amount (principal minus upfront fees). This is the method required by TILA for lender disclosures.

The calculator also features a loan comparison tool — a feature our main competitor limits — that lets you enter two different loan offers side-by-side and instantly see which one is genuinely cheaper in terms of APR and total cost.

What Fees Are Included in APR?

Loan TypeIncluded in APRNOT Included in APR
MortgageOrigination fees, discount points, broker fees, mortgage insurance, prepaid interestAppraisal, title insurance, recording fees, transfer taxes, home inspection
Auto LoanFinance charges, dealer fees rolled into loan, documentation feesRegistration, gap insurance (if optional), extended warranty
Personal LoanOrigination fee, application fee (if required), prepayment penaltiesOptional insurance, late fees (situational)
Credit CardInterest rate onlyAnnual fees, late fees, balance transfer fees, foreign transaction fees

📐 APR Formula: Two Methods Explained

Method 1: Simplified APR Formula (CFPB/Consumer-Facing)

Simple APR Calculation
APR = [(Total Interest + Total Fees) ÷ Loan Principal ÷ Days in Term] × 365 × 100
Total Interest = sum of all interest payments over the loan term
Total Fees = sum of all finance charges, points, and origination fees
Loan Principal = original loan amount (before fees)
Days in Term = loan term in months × 30.44 (average days/month)

Method 2: IRR Method (TILA-Compliant, Used by Lenders)

Internal Rate of Return Method (Precise)
Loan Net = PMT × [(1 − (1+r)⁻ⁿ) / r]
Loan Net = Loan Amount − Upfront Fees (what you actually receive)
PMT = monthly payment calculated on the full loan amount at stated rate
r = true monthly rate (solve for this using Newton-Raphson iteration)
APR = r × 12 × 100
Conceptually: you're paying the same monthly payment on a smaller loan (principal minus fees). Since you're paying more per dollar actually received, the effective rate is higher.

Why Two Methods Give Different Results

The simplified formula is more intuitive and works well for short-term loans and back-of-envelope calculations. The IRR method is more mathematically precise — particularly for longer-term loans — because it accounts for the time value of money and the compounding effect of paying interest on fees that were rolled into the loan. Our calculator uses the IRR method for its primary result.

📋 Worked Examples: APR Calculations for Every Loan Type

📌 Example 1: Mortgage — $300,000 at 7.0%, 30 years, $4,500 in fees

Stated rate: 7.0% | Monthly payment: $1,996/mo

IRR method: Net loan = $300,000 − $4,500 = $295,500

Solve: $295,500 = $1,996 × [(1 − (1+r)⁻³⁶⁰) / r] → r = 0.5970%/month → APR = 7.16%

Simple method: Total interest = $418,527, fees = $4,500. APR = ($423,027 / $300,000 / 10,958 days) × 365 × 100 = ≈7.14%

📌 Example 2: Auto Loan — $25,000 at 5.9%, 60 months, $500 origination fee

Stated rate: 5.9% | Monthly payment: $481.97/mo

Net loan: $25,000 − $500 = $24,500

Solve for r: $24,500 = $481.97 × [(1 − (1+r)⁻⁶⁰) / r] → r = 0.5206%/month → APR = 6.25%

The $500 fee adds 0.35% to the effective rate on a 5-year auto loan

📌 Example 3: Personal Loan — $10,000 at 12%, 36 months, $400 origination (4%)

Stated rate: 12% | Monthly payment: $332.14/mo

Net loan: $10,000 − $400 = $9,600

Solve for r: $9,600 = $332.14 × [(1 − (1+r)⁻³⁶) / r] → r = 1.148%/month → APR = 13.78%

The 4% origination fee adds 1.78% to the effective APR on a short-term personal loan

⚠️

Fee impact is term-dependent: The same $4,500 fee adds 0.16% to APR on a 30-year mortgage but would add nearly 1.5% to APR on a 5-year loan. Always evaluate fee impact relative to your expected holding period, not just the loan term.

🔍 APR vs. Interest Rate: A Complete Comparison

The most common source of confusion in borrowing is the difference between the stated interest rate and the APR. Here's an exhaustive breakdown:

FactorInterest RateAPR
What it measuresCost of principal onlyTotal yearly cost of borrowing
Includes fees?NoYes
Required by law?Yes (basic disclosure)Yes (TILA — more comprehensive)
Best for comparison?No — ignores feesYes — standardized
Always higher?No (base rate)Yes (APR ≥ interest rate)
Credit cardsSame as APRSame as interest rate (no fee inclusion)
Variable loansChanges with indexChanges with index + fees amortized
What to use when shoppingUnderstanding payment mathComparing loan offers

When APR Can Be Misleading

APR is an excellent comparison tool for long-term loans held to maturity. However, it can actually mislead in specific situations our competitor's page doesn't address:

  • Early payoff: APR spreads fees across the full loan term. If you pay off a 30-year mortgage in 7 years (national average), the effective fee burden is much higher than the APR suggests.
  • Refinancing: When comparing a "no-cost" refinance vs. a lower-rate refinance with closing costs, APR favors the no-cost option unless the rate difference is significant and you hold the loan long enough.
  • Short-term loans: A 90-day bridge loan with a $1,000 origination fee on a $50,000 balance has a relatively small dollar impact but can produce an APR that looks alarming.
  • Buy-down points: Paying 2 points to lower a mortgage rate might lower the APR slightly on a 30-year loan but could increase effective cost if you sell in 5 years.

📈 APR vs. APY: The Compounding Difference

Banks and financial institutions deliberately use APR for loan advertising and APY for savings advertising — because APR looks lower and APY looks higher at the same nominal rate. Understanding this asymmetry can save you money.

FeatureAPRAPY
Full nameAnnual Percentage RateAnnual Percentage Yield
Used forLoans (borrowing)Savings (earning)
CompoundingSimple interest (no compounding)Includes compound interest effect
Higher or lower?Lower (same nominal rate)Higher (same nominal rate)
FormulaRate × (months/year)(1 + rate/n)ⁿ − 1
Example: 12% monthly compoundingAPR = 12.00%APY = 12.68%
Converting APR to APY
APY = (1 + APR/n)ⁿ − 1
n = number of compounding periods per year (12 for monthly)
Example: APR 12% monthly compounding → APY = (1 + 0.12/12)¹² − 1 = 12.68%

The APR/APY distinction is why a credit card advertising "22% APR" is actually charging compound interest at an effective annual rate of approximately 24.36% APY when balances are carried month-to-month.

🔄 Fixed APR vs. Variable APR: Risk and Strategy

Most competitors' APR calculators treat fixed-rate loans only. Here's a complete breakdown of the fixed vs. variable distinction that's critical for smart borrowing decisions:

Fixed APR

A fixed APR remains constant throughout the loan term regardless of market interest rate movements. This provides payment predictability — your monthly obligation never changes. Fixed APRs are typically higher than variable rates at loan origination because the lender is absorbing interest rate risk.

  • Best when: Rates are historically low and expected to rise
  • Best for: Long-term loans (15–30 year mortgages), risk-averse borrowers, tight budgets
  • Disadvantage: If rates fall significantly, you pay above-market rates without refinancing

Variable APR

Variable (adjustable) APRs change periodically based on a benchmark index — typically the Prime Rate, SOFR (Secured Overnight Financing Rate, which replaced LIBOR), or the 1-year Treasury index. The rate = index + lender margin (e.g., Prime + 5%).

  • Best when: Rates are high and expected to fall, or you plan a short holding period
  • Best for: ARMs (adjustable-rate mortgages), credit cards, HELOCs, short-term personal loans
  • Disadvantage: Payment uncertainty; potential significant rate increases over the loan life
⚠️

Credit card variable APRs: Unlike mortgage ARMs with periodic caps, most credit card APRs can change with as little as 45 days' notice and with no cap on how high they can go. The average credit card APR hit record highs of 22–24% in 2024. Carrying balances on variable-rate cards poses significant long-term cost risk.

APR Rate Ranges by Loan Type (2025)

Loan TypeExcellent Credit APRGood Credit APRFair Credit APRNotes
30-yr Fixed Mortgage6.5–7.0%7.0–7.5%7.5–8.5%Includes fees; varies by points
15-yr Fixed Mortgage6.0–6.5%6.5–7.0%7.0–7.8%Lower rate, higher payment
New Auto Loan (60 mo)5.0–6.5%7.0–9.0%12.0–18.0%Based on lender avg
Personal Loan (36 mo)8.0–12.0%13.0–20.0%22.0–36.0%Wide range; unsecured
Credit Card (variable)16.0–19.0%19.0–24.0%25.0–30.0%+No fees included in APR
HELOC (variable)7.0–8.5%8.5–10.0%10.0–13.0%Secured by home equity

*Ranges reflect approximate market conditions as of early 2025. Actual rates depend on lender, creditworthiness, loan amount, and market conditions.

🎯 How Credit Score Affects Your APR

Your credit score is the single most impactful variable in determining the APR you receive. Even a 50-point improvement can translate to thousands of dollars in interest savings, particularly on large, long-term loans like mortgages.

Credit Score RangeMortgage APR (30yr)Auto APR (60mo)Personal APR (36mo)Credit Card APR
760–850 (Exceptional)~6.75%~5.5%~9.0%~16%
720–759 (Very Good)~7.0%~7.0%~12%~18%
690–719 (Good)~7.3%~9.0%~17%~21%
660–689 (Fair)~7.8%~12.0%~22%~24%
620–659 (Poor)~8.5%+~16.0%~30%~27%
Below 620 (Very Poor)FHA required / 9%+~20%+~36%~29%+

The lifetime financial impact of credit score on APR is enormous. On a $300,000 30-year mortgage, the difference between a 760 score (6.75% APR) and a 680 score (7.8% APR) is approximately $74,000 in total interest paid. Spending 6–12 months improving your credit score before applying for a major loan is almost always worth the wait.

Three Ways to Improve Your APR Before Borrowing

  • Pay down revolving balances: Reducing credit card utilization below 10% (from say 30%) can add 20–50 points to your score within 1–2 billing cycles
  • Dispute credit report errors: 1 in 5 Americans has an error on their credit report. A significant error removal can add 50–100 points immediately
  • Avoid new credit inquiries: Hard inquiries cost ~5 points each; space them out and avoid applying for new cards in the 6–12 months before a major loan

⚖️ TILA and Regulation Z: Your Legal Right to Know APR

Most borrowers don't realize that APR disclosure is a federal legal requirement, not just a courtesy. The Truth in Lending Act (TILA) and its implementing regulation, Regulation Z, mandate that lenders must:

  • Disclose the APR before the borrower signs the credit agreement
  • Use a standardized calculation method so borrowers can make valid comparisons
  • Provide the Loan Estimate form for mortgages within 3 business days of application
  • Clearly distinguish between the stated interest rate and the APR

Violations of TILA carry significant penalties for lenders, including actual damages, statutory damages, and attorney's fees. If a lender refuses or is unable to clearly provide the APR on any loan product, that is a regulatory red flag.

Practical tip: For mortgage shopping, request the Loan Estimate from each lender. Page 3 of the Loan Estimate contains the disclosed APR. Comparing Loan Estimate APRs from multiple lenders is the most reliable way to identify the genuinely cheapest mortgage offer. Per the CFPB, getting quotes from 3+ lenders saves the average buyer $1,500–$3,000 in year one.

✅ Why Use This APR Calculator?

  • More than just APR — full amortization schedule, fee breakdown, and total cost analysis
  • Side-by-side loan comparison — paste in two offers and see which is genuinely cheaper
  • Credit card APR mode — calculate payoff timeline, total interest, and savings from higher payments
  • Custom fee entry — add any number of fees individually, not just a single "total fee" field
  • IRR-based calculation — uses the same method lenders use for TILA-compliant APR disclosure
  • Rate comparison bar chart — visual display of stated rate vs. APR vs. fee premium
  • 100% free, no data collection — all calculations run in your browser

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

APR (Annual Percentage Rate) is the total yearly cost of borrowing money including interest AND all mandatory fees, expressed as a percentage. The stated interest rate only covers interest on the principal. For example, a $200,000 loan at 7.0% with $3,000 in fees has an APR of approximately 7.22% — higher because you're effectively paying more for less money received. Under the Truth in Lending Act, lenders must disclose APR to enable accurate loan comparisons.

The standard APR formula is: APR = [(Total Interest + Total Fees) ÷ Loan Principal ÷ Days in Loan Term] × 365 × 100. For precise TILA-compliant APR, lenders use the Internal Rate of Return (IRR) method: find the monthly rate r that makes the present value of all payments equal the net loan amount (principal minus upfront fees). APR = r × 12 × 100. Our calculator uses the IRR method for accuracy. For a $10,000 loan, 3 years, 8% rate, $300 fees: APR ≈ 8.97%.

In 2025, a good mortgage APR is at or below the national average for your credit tier. For borrowers with excellent credit (760+), 30-year fixed mortgage APRs of 6.5–7.0% are competitive. Good credit (700–759) typically sees 7.0–7.5% APR. The spread between stated interest rate and APR on a typical conventional mortgage with moderate fees is about 0.1–0.4%. A larger spread indicates higher fees and should prompt careful review of what's included.

APR (Annual Percentage Rate) measures borrowing cost without compounding — used on loans. APY (Annual Percentage Yield) measures earning potential with compounding — used on savings. At the same nominal rate, APY is always higher than APR due to compounding. Banks advertise APR on loans (smaller number) and APY on savings accounts (bigger number). Conversion: APY = (1 + APR/12)¹² − 1. At 22% APR (monthly compounding), the effective APY is 24.36%.

Fees included in mortgage APR: loan origination fee, discount points, mortgage broker fee, mortgage insurance premiums (PMI/MIP), prepaid interest at closing, and certain application fees. Fees NOT included in APR: title search and insurance, home appraisal, home inspection, recording fees, transfer taxes, credit report fee, and attorney fees. Because lenders have discretion in classifying some charges, always request itemized fee lists and ask which fees are included in their disclosed APR.

Not always. APR assumes you hold the loan to full maturity. If you plan early payoff, a loan with lower upfront fees and slightly higher APR may cost less than a high-fee, low-APR loan. This is because APR amortizes fees across the entire term — the shorter your actual holding period, the less benefit you get from the lower rate. For short holding periods, compare total dollar cost (interest + fees) for your expected hold period, not just APR. Our loan comparison tool helps model this.

Even small APR differences create large total cost differences, especially on long-term loans. On a $300,000 30-year mortgage: 7.0% APR vs. 7.5% APR = approximately $32,000 more in total interest. On a $25,000 auto loan (5 years): 6% vs. 7% APR = about $665 difference. On a $10,000 credit card balance (carried 3 years): 18% vs. 22% APR = approximately $1,200 more. The longer the term and larger the balance, the more impact each percentage point of APR has.

🏆 About This APR Calculator

Accuracy & Methodology

Our APR calculator uses the Internal Rate of Return (IRR) method via Newton-Raphson numerical iteration — the same approach mandated by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and Regulation Z for TILA-compliant APR disclosure. The loan comparison tool uses identical methodology for both loans, ensuring valid side-by-side comparisons.

Known Limitations

  • Calculator results assume a fixed-rate loan. Variable-rate loans will have APR that changes over time as the index rate moves.
  • Fee classification (what's included vs. excluded) may vary by lender. Always confirm with your specific lender which charges are incorporated in their disclosed APR.
  • Results are informational estimates; this is not a TILA disclosure and does not constitute legal advice.
  • For complex loan structures (balloon payments, ARMs, interest-only periods), consult a licensed mortgage professional or use our Mortgage Calculator for full analysis.

Data Privacy

All calculations execute entirely within your browser using JavaScript. No loan amounts, interest rates, fee data, or any other inputs are transmitted to our servers, stored, sold, or shared. See our Privacy Policy for full details.