APR Calculator

Reveal the true cost of a loan by converting interest plus fees into a single APR.

Enter your details

$
$

Origination fees, points, broker fees, etc.

%
years

True APR (incl. fees)

8.154%

+2.154% vs. stated rate

Loan Amount$10,000
Cash You Receive$9,500
Monthly Payment$193.33
Total Interest + Fees$2,099.68
Stated rate: 6.00%True APR: 8.15%

Fees push your true cost of borrowing 2.15% higher than the advertised rate. Always compare APRs across lenders — not just interest rates.

Interest rate vs. APR — what's the difference?

The interest rate is the cost of borrowing the money, expressed as a percentage. The APR (Annual Percentage Rate) includes the interest rate plus upfront fees like origination fees, points, and broker charges — spread across the life of the loan. APR is the number to use when comparing loans, because it reflects your true cost of borrowing.

How this calculator works

Enter the loan amount, any upfront fees, the lender's stated interest rate, and the loan term. The calculator determines the equivalent interest rate that, applied to the net amount you actually receive (loan minus fees), produces the same monthly payment. That equivalent rate is your true APR.

A real-world example

A $10,000 personal loan advertised at "6% interest" with a $500 origination fee sounds reasonable. But that $500 fee means you only receive $9,500 — and you're paying interest on the full $10,000. The result? Your true APR is closer to 8.15%, not 6%. Always read the APR disclosure, not just the headline rate.

Common loan fees to watch

APR vs. APY

Don't confuse APR with APY (Annual Percentage Yield). APR is what you pay on a loan and doesn't include compounding. APY is what you earn on savings and does include compounding. A 12% APR loan with monthly compounding costs you the equivalent of ~12.68% APY over a year.

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