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πŸš— Car Affordability Calculator

Enter the monthly payment you can afford along with the APR, loan term, and down payment, and this calculator works backward to give you the loan principal, an affordable car price, and total interest.

Enter your monthly payment, APR, and term. Down payment and trade-in value are optional.

Common terms: 36 / 48 / 60 months

Results
Affordable Car Price
β€”
Loan Principal
β€”
Total Interest Paid
β€”
The 20/4/10 Rule
  • Aim for a down payment of at least 20% of the car price.
  • Keep the loan term to 4 years (48 months) or less.
  • Keep payment + insurance + fuel combined under 10% of your gross income.

This result is based on loan principal only β€” taxes, registration fees, and insurance are extra (see the Out-the-Door Price Calculator). This is guidance, not financial advice.

GUIDE

Learn more

01

The Reverse Loan Formula (Present Value of an Annuity)

This calculator works backward from "how much car can I afford" based on a monthly payment. With monthly rate r = APR Γ· 100 Γ· 12 and loan term n (months), the loan principal you can afford is derived from the present-value-of-an-annuity formula.

Principal = PMT Γ— (1 βˆ’ (1 + r)⁻ⁿ) Γ· r

When the APR is 0% (a promotional 0% financing offer), we avoid dividing by zero and simply use Principal = PMT Γ— n. Adding the down payment and trade-in value to the principal gives the affordable car price, and subtracting the principal from the total paid (PMT Γ— n) gives the total interest.
02

Worked Example

With a monthly payment of 500, APR of 5%, loan term of 48 months, down payment of 5,000, and no trade-in:

Monthly rate r = 5 Γ· 100 Γ· 12 β‰ˆ 0.004167
Loan principal β‰ˆ 21,711.6
Affordable car price = principal + down payment = 21,711.6 + 5,000 β‰ˆ 26,711.6
Total interest = (500 Γ— 48) βˆ’ 21,711.6 β‰ˆ 2,288.4

In other words, if you can pay 500 per month for 48 months and put 5,000 down, a car priced around 26,711.6 fits your budget.
03

The 20/4/10 Rule and Caveats

The 20/4/10 rule is a widely used car-buying guideline from U.S. consumer finance: put down at least 20%, finance for 4 years or less, and keep payment + insurance + fuel under 10% of income. A shorter loan term reduces total interest and lowers the risk of owing more than the car is worth (negative equity) as it depreciates.

However, the "affordable car price" this calculator produces is closer to the sticker price based on loan principal alone β€” it does not include taxes, registration, dealer fees, or insurance you would actually pay. Use the Out-the-Door Price Calculator to see the real total, and treat this tool as general guidance, not a substitute for financial advice.

Frequently asked questions

Why is the default loan term 48 months?
48 months (4 years) is both the upper limit recommended by the 20/4/10 rule and one of the most common auto loan terms in practice. It balances a lower monthly payment than 36 months against less total interest than 60 months. You can change it to 36 or 60 months as needed.
What if I get a 0% promotional APR?
If you enter 0 for APR, there is no interest, so the loan principal is simply the monthly payment multiplied by the number of months (PMT Γ— n). Total interest is 0 in this case, and the affordable car price is just the principal plus down payment and trade-in value.
Should I include insurance and fuel costs in this calculation?
No β€” the loan principal, affordable car price, and total interest calculated here are based on the payment alone and do not include insurance or fuel. However, when checking the 20/4/10 rule's "10%" guideline (payment + insurance + fuel ≀ 10% of income), you should add insurance and fuel separately against your income.
Can I calculate this without a down payment or trade-in?
Yes. Down payment and trade-in value are optional and default to 0. If both are left at 0, the affordable car price equals the loan principal.