See how extra monthly payments or a one-time payment can shorten payoff time, reduce interest, and change your payoff date.
This calculator compares a base payoff path with a payoff path that includes an extra monthly payment, a one-time upfront payment, or both.
The model applies monthly interest using APR ÷ 12, subtracts the regular payment, applies the extra payment inputs, and compares payoff time, payoff date, total interest, and interest saved.
An extra payment is only helpful if it changes the outcome enough to matter in real life.
Sometimes a small monthly increase cuts more time than people expect. Sometimes it barely changes the result. The goal of this calculator is to help you determine whether the extra amount is doing enough to justify what it takes away from the rest of your monthly budget.
A result can look better on paper and still fall short of being worth the tradeoff. What matters is whether the change is meaningful, not just whether the numbers move.
A monthly extra payment keeps steady pressure on the balance. It tends to matter most when the payoff path is still long and interest is still taking a noticeable share of each payment.
A one-time payment helps by cutting the balance sooner. It can have more impact than it first seems because the lower balance leaves less room for future interest to build.
Using both can create a better result because the one-time payment reduces the balance early and the monthly extra keeps pushing the balance down after that. When the budget can support it, that combination often does the most work.
Extra payments typically matter more when the current setup is still leaving a lot of room for interest to do damage.
That's why an extra amount that looks modest can still make a real difference in the right setup.
There are also cases where adding more to the payment helps, but not enough to fix what's really wrong with the plan.
If the result only improves a little and the higher payment makes the budget less stable, forcing the extra payment may not be the best move.
When the extra payment is doing enough to matter, it usually shows up in one of two places: less time left or less interest still ahead.
Sometimes the extra payment still helps, but not enough to change the bigger picture. When that happens, it usually makes more sense to test a different amount, compare monthly and one-time options, or look at whether the rate is the bigger issue.
If the current result only changes a little, test a slightly higher amount. Sometimes the first increase helps, but the next one is what starts to make a real difference.
If a higher monthly payment feels hard to sustain, test whether a one-time payment gives you a better improvement without putting the same pressure on your budget every month.
If paying extra isn't changing enough, the real problem may be the interest cost itself. In that case, the next useful step is usually to look at how much interest the balance is still generating.
These guides can help you judge when extra payments make a real difference, when interest is the bigger problem, and which changes are most likely to improve the result.