Finance

Car Loan Amortization Schedule Explained — Payment Table, Chart, and Payoff Timeline

Build a car loan amortization schedule with payment tables and charts. See principal vs interest each month and how extra payments save on auto loans. Free calculator.

By Daily Calcs Team , Independent Editorial Research · Reviewed by Daily Calcs Editorial , Calculator Methodology Review · Published June 20, 2026 · 7 min read

Direct Answer

A car loan amortization schedule shows how each auto loan payment splits between principal and interest over the life of the loan. On a $30,000 loan at 7% annual percentage rate (APR) over 60 months, the payment is $594/month, but only $419 goes to principal in month 1 while $175 goes to interest. By month 60, nearly the entire payment hits principal.

Use the Auto Loan Amortization Calculator to build a full payment table, chart, and schedule with your loan amount, rate, and term — plus optional extra payments.

Last verified on: June 21, 2026

Editorial note: This guide explains standard fixed-rate auto loan amortization. It does not include sales tax, registration, dealer fees, or variable-rate adjustments. Always confirm your lender’s prepayment terms before making extra payments.

Research method: Daily Calcs modeled a $30,000 auto loan at 7% APR over 60 months using the standard fixed-payment amortization formula. Extra payment scenarios apply additional monthly principal after the scheduled payment. Verified June 21, 2026.

Sample Car Loan Amortization Table: $30,000 at 7%

MonthPaymentPrincipalInterestBalance
1$594$419$175$29,581
12$594$445$149$24,742
24$594$476$118$19,218
36$594$510$84$13,248
48$594$547$47$6,764
60$594$588$6$0

Total interest over 60 months: $5,642 on a $30,000 loan.

The pattern mirrors mortgage amortization: interest-heavy early payments, principal-heavy late payments. The difference is the shorter term — you reach the crossover point (where principal exceeds interest) much faster on a 5-year auto loan than a 30-year mortgage.

How Extra Payments Change the Schedule

StrategyMonthly PaymentPayoff TimeTotal InterestInterest Saved
Standard (no extra)$59460 months$5,642$0
+ $50/month extra$64451 months$4,912$730
+ $100/month extra$69446 months$4,712$930
+ $200/month extra$79438 months$4,198$1,444

Extra payments applied to principal only — never to future scheduled payments — produce the largest savings. Even $50/month cuts roughly 9 months and saves $730 in interest on this example.

Car Loan vs Mortgage Amortization

Auto Loan ($30k)Mortgage ($300k)
Typical term60 months360 months
Example rate7.0%6.5%
Monthly P&I$594$1,896
Total interest$5,642$382,560
Crossover (principal > interest)Month 1 (short term)~Month 216

Auto loans feel expensive per month relative to the loan size because rates run higher and terms are shorter. But total interest on a car loan is a fraction of a mortgage because the balance and term are much smaller.

Calculator Methodology

The auto loan payment uses:

M = P × r(1 + r)^n / ((1 + r)^n − 1)
  • P = loan principal ($30,000)
  • r = APR / 12 (7% → 0.005833)
  • n = number of payments (60)

Each month’s interest = remaining balance × r. Principal = M − interest. Extra payments reduce balance before the next month’s interest calculation.

Official and Supporting Sources

Next Step

Enter your loan amount, APR, and term in the Auto Loan Amortization Calculator to generate your full payment table and see how extra payments change your payoff date.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a car loan amortization schedule?

A car loan amortization schedule is a payment table showing each monthly installment split between principal and interest, plus the remaining loan balance after every payment. On a typical 60-month auto loan, early payments are mostly interest because the balance is highest. As the balance falls, more of each payment goes to principal. The schedule helps you see exactly how much the loan costs over time and how extra payments accelerate payoff.

How is an auto loan amortization schedule calculated?

Auto loans use the same fixed-payment amortization formula as mortgages: M = P × r(1+r)^n / ((1+r)^n − 1). For a $30,000 loan at 7% APR over 60 months, the monthly payment is $594.04. Each month, interest equals the remaining balance times the monthly rate (7%/12), and principal equals the payment minus that interest. The Auto Loan Amortization Calculator runs this math automatically and generates the full table.

Can I make extra payments on a car loan amortization schedule?

Yes. Extra principal payments reduce the remaining balance, which lowers future interest charges and can shorten the loan term. On a $30,000 loan at 7% over 60 months, adding $100/month in extra principal pays the loan off about 14 months early and saves roughly $900 in interest. Check your lender's prepayment policy — most auto loans allow extra principal without penalty, but confirm before paying ahead.

Car loan amortization vs mortgage amortization: What is different?

The math is identical — both use the standard amortization formula. The differences are practical: auto loans have shorter terms (36 to 84 months vs 360 for mortgages), higher rates on average, and no escrow for taxes or insurance. A $30,000 car loan at 7% costs $35,642 total over 60 months, while a $30,000 mortgage slice at 6.5% over 30 years costs far more in total interest because of the longer term.

What columns should a car loan amortization table include?

A useful auto loan amortization table includes payment number, payment date, total payment amount, principal portion, interest portion, and remaining balance. Some tables also show cumulative interest paid and cumulative principal paid. The Auto Loan Amortization Calculator generates all of these columns and lets you export the schedule for budgeting or comparison.

Does a car loan amortization calculator include taxes and fees?

The basic amortization schedule covers principal and interest only. Sales tax, registration fees, dealer documentation charges, and gap insurance are separate upfront or recurring costs not included in the standard payment table. When comparing dealer financing offers, add those fees to your total cost of ownership rather than relying on the monthly payment alone.