What Interest Rate Am I Actually Paying?
Every other calculator asks for the rate. This one solves for it. Give it any three of the four numbers — balance, payment, rate, term — and it works out the fourth.
Solve for
Your interest rate
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Why almost nobody offers this
The payment formula solves cleanly in one direction. Give it a loan amount, a rate and a term, and it hands you a payment. Run it backwards and the math stops cooperating: there is no clean algebraic way to isolate the interest rate. The rate is buried inside an exponent, and it cannot be pulled back out with ordinary algebra.
So the calculator has to solve it numerically — guess a rate, see what payment that produces, compare it to the real payment, adjust the guess, and repeat until the two converge. This tool does that in a fraction of a second, and it lands on the exact rate to several decimal places. That extra work is the whole reason most of the big calculator sites skip this and only give you the easy direction.
When you actually need it
- You inherited a loan or a note and have the balance and the payment, but the rate is buried in paperwork you no longer have.
- You are reverse engineering a seller financed deal or a private note, where somebody quoted a payment and never quoted a rate.
- Someone quoted you a payment, not a rate. This is worth pausing on. If a lender or a builder leads with "your payment will be X" and gets vague when you ask for the rate, put the numbers in here. Sometimes the answer is fine. Sometimes it explains why they led with the payment.
- You want to sanity check a loan estimate in ten seconds without opening a spreadsheet.
For the loan officers reading this
This is the fastest way to back into a competitor's rate when a borrower shows you a payment from another lender and no rate sheet. Strip the escrows out, drop in the balance, the P&I and the term, and you have their rate before the client finishes the sentence. It is also the cleanest way to show a client what a payment quote is actually costing them, because a rate is comparable across lenders and a payment is not.
Common questions
Can you calculate an interest rate from a monthly payment?
Yes, as long as you also know the loan balance and the remaining term. Those three numbers pin the rate down exactly. The calculator solves it numerically because the rate cannot be isolated with algebra.
Why does my answer look way too high?
Almost always because the payment you entered includes taxes, insurance, PMI or HOA. Those are not interest, and the calculator does not know they are in there — it assumes the whole payment is principal and interest. Use the P&I figure only.
Is this the same as APR?
No. This is the note rate, which is the rate the payment is built from. APR folds in certain loan costs and fees and is a different number by design. If you are comparing offers, know which one you are looking at.
It says the numbers are impossible. What does that mean?
If the payment is too small to ever retire the balance over the term you gave, no positive interest rate can produce it — the loan would never pay off. Check the term and confirm the payment is principal and interest.