Debt Payoff Calculator
Estimate payoff time, total interest, and the impact of extra payments with the WealthCalcLab debt payoff calculator.
Updated April 5, 2026
What this calculator does
This debt payoff calculator shows how long a balance may take to repay under a fixed monthly payment plan and how much interest may accumulate along the way.
It is useful for personal loans, informal debt plans, and other obligations where you know the balance, the rate, and the payment you intend to make.
The schedule helps you see whether your payment is mainly covering interest or making meaningful progress on principal reduction.
How to use it
Enter the current balance, annual rate, and the monthly payment you plan to make.
Add an extra monthly payment in Advanced options to test a faster payoff strategy.
Use the payoff time and total interest cards together so you can weigh speed against monthly affordability.
Method
Ending balance = prior balance + interest - paymentThe schedule runs month by month until the balance reaches zero or until the payment is found to be insufficient.
Methodology
The calculator applies interest monthly to the remaining balance, then subtracts the payment and any extra payment.
If the payment is too low to cover monthly interest, payoff is not possible under the current assumptions.
This makes the tool useful for stress testing whether the plan is viable before you commit to it.
Worked example
A balance with a double-digit rate can take much longer to clear than expected if the payment barely exceeds monthly interest.
Adding even a modest extra payment can shorten the timeline meaningfully because principal starts falling faster.
How to interpret the results
If interest share is high, the current repayment plan is spending a large portion of each payment just to service the debt.
A viable payoff plan should steadily reduce principal rather than leaving the balance nearly flat month after month.
Common mistakes
- Setting a payment so low that it barely covers monthly interest.
- Ignoring the impact of consistent small overpayments.
- Assuming the payoff timeline will be the same if the rate later changes.
Key terms
Quick definitions for the finance terms that matter on this page.
Interest share
The percentage of the total amount paid that goes to interest instead of reducing principal.
Principal
The original debt amount still remaining to be repaid.
Frequently asked questions
Clear answers on assumptions, interpretation, and the limits of each estimate.
What if my payment is too low?
If the payment does not exceed monthly interest, the debt will not amortize and the calculator will flag the plan as insufficient.
Do extra payments always help?
Yes in a standard payoff model, because they reduce principal faster and therefore reduce future interest.
Can I use this for variable-rate debt?
Only as a snapshot. If the rate can change materially, test multiple scenarios.
Does this include fees or penalties?
No. Add those manually if they are material to your payoff plan.
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Continue your planning with tools that answer the next logical question.
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Important disclaimer
Georgia figures are planning estimates only. Confirm local rates, lender disclosures, tax rules, and legal treatment with official sources before acting.