EMI Calculator
Use the WealthCalcLab EMI calculator to estimate monthly installments, balance reduction, total interest, and prepayment impact for fixed-rate loans.
Updated April 5, 2026
What this calculator does
This EMI calculator is built for borrowers who think in equated monthly installments rather than generic loan payments. It is especially useful for home loans, vehicle finance, and long-tenure borrowing where the EMI becomes a central part of monthly budgeting.
EMI-focused planning helps you answer practical questions: how much will you pay each month, how much of that installment is interest at the start, and how much time or interest can you save by prepaying a little more each month.
Canada users can model fees and prepayments to see whether the quoted EMI fits both current cash flow and long-term borrowing cost.
How to use it
Enter the loan amount, annual rate, and total tenure in months.
Use the prepayment field if you intend to pay extra principal every month.
Scan the EMI, total interest, and payoff time cards first, then review the schedule.
Formula
EMI = P × r × (1 + r)^n ÷ ((1 + r)^n - 1)P is the financed amount, r is the monthly rate, and n is the number of monthly installments.
Methodology
The EMI is calculated using the standard amortization formula for equal monthly installments.
Any prepayment entered is added on top of the scheduled EMI and applied toward principal after monthly interest is covered.
Processing fees are treated as borrowing cost rather than part of the loan balance unless you intentionally include them in the loan amount.
Worked example
A long-tenure loan can produce a manageable EMI but still generate a large cumulative interest bill. The table helps you see that trade-off clearly.
Even a modest recurring prepayment can meaningfully shorten the payoff period on long EMI schedules.
How to interpret the results
Use the EMI figure for monthly affordability and the total interest figure for overall cost evaluation.
If prepayment shortens the term dramatically, it may be more valuable than waiting for a future refinance.
Common mistakes
- Using annual tenure instead of months when comparing EMI offers.
- Treating low EMI as automatically better without comparing the total interest paid.
- Ignoring processing fees or other lender charges when comparing offers.
Key terms
Quick definitions for the finance terms that matter on this page.
EMI
A fixed monthly installment that repays both principal and interest over the loan tenure.
Prepayment
An amount paid above the scheduled EMI to reduce principal faster.
Frequently asked questions
Clear answers on assumptions, interpretation, and the limits of each estimate.
What happens if I prepay every month?
The calculator applies the extra amount to principal, which typically reduces both the total interest and the repayment timeline.
Can I use this EMI calculator for zero-interest financing?
Yes. If the rate is zero, the monthly installment is simply the loan amount divided by the number of months.
Should the processing fee be added into EMI?
Only if the lender is financing the fee into the loan. Otherwise keep it separate to see the true all-in borrowing cost.
Is EMI the same as APR?
No. EMI is the monthly payment amount, while APR is a rate measure that can include fees and other borrowing costs.
Related calculators
Continue your planning with tools that answer the next logical question.
Loan Calculator
Estimate monthly payments, total interest, payoff time, and amortization for standard installment loans.
Mortgage Calculator
Calculate mortgage payments, principal and interest, housing costs, and amortization with taxes and insurance.
Debt Payoff Calculator
Estimate payoff time, total interest, and balance reduction for a debt balance under a fixed monthly payment plan.
Refinance Calculator
Compare current mortgage terms with a refinance offer to estimate payment changes, interest savings, and break-even timing.
Important disclaimer
Canadian estimates use simplified federal-style assumptions and do not include every provincial tax, insurance, or lender pricing rule.