Advanced Loan Amortization Calculator

Calculate your loan amortization schedule with monthly payment breakdown. See principal, interest, and balance for each payment plus total interest costs.

Amortization Schedule

# Date Payment Principal Interest Extra Balance

Full original guide (expanded)

Understanding Loan Amortization

Loan amortization is the process of paying off debt through regular payments over time. Each payment includes both principal (the original loan amount) and interest. Early payments consist mostly of interest, while later payments apply more toward the principal balance.


Audit: Complete
Formula (LaTeX) + variables + units
This section shows the formulas used by the calculator engine, plus variable definitions and units.
Formula (extracted LaTeX)
\[','\]
','
Variables and units
  • P = principal (loan amount) (currency)
  • r = periodic interest rate (annual rate ÷ payments per year) (1)
  • n = total number of payments (years × payments per year) (count)
  • M = periodic payment for principal + interest (currency)
Sources (authoritative):
Changelog
Version: 0.1.0-draft
Last code update: 2026-01-19
0.1.0-draft · 2026-01-19
  • Initial audit spec draft generated from HTML extraction (review required).
  • Verify formulas match the calculator engine and convert any text-only formulas to LaTeX.
  • Confirm sources are authoritative and relevant to the calculator methodology.
Verified by Ugo Candido on 2026-01-19
Profile · LinkedIn

Understanding Loan Amortization

Loan amortization is the process of paying off debt through regular payments over time. Each payment includes both principal (the original loan amount) and interest. Early payments consist mostly of interest, while later payments apply more toward the principal balance.


Audit: Complete
Formula (LaTeX) + variables + units
This section shows the formulas used by the calculator engine, plus variable definitions and units.
Formula (extracted LaTeX)
\[','\]
','
Variables and units
  • P = principal (loan amount) (currency)
  • r = periodic interest rate (annual rate ÷ payments per year) (1)
  • n = total number of payments (years × payments per year) (count)
  • M = periodic payment for principal + interest (currency)
Sources (authoritative):
Changelog
Version: 0.1.0-draft
Last code update: 2026-01-19
0.1.0-draft · 2026-01-19
  • Initial audit spec draft generated from HTML extraction (review required).
  • Verify formulas match the calculator engine and convert any text-only formulas to LaTeX.
  • Confirm sources are authoritative and relevant to the calculator methodology.
Verified by Ugo Candido on 2026-01-19
Profile · LinkedIn

Understanding Loan Amortization

Loan amortization is the process of paying off debt through regular payments over time. Each payment includes both principal (the original loan amount) and interest. Early payments consist mostly of interest, while later payments apply more toward the principal balance.


Audit: Complete
Formula (LaTeX) + variables + units
This section shows the formulas used by the calculator engine, plus variable definitions and units.
Formula (extracted LaTeX)
\[','\]
','
Variables and units
  • P = principal (loan amount) (currency)
  • r = periodic interest rate (annual rate ÷ payments per year) (1)
  • n = total number of payments (years × payments per year) (count)
  • M = periodic payment for principal + interest (currency)
Sources (authoritative):
Changelog
Version: 0.1.0-draft
Last code update: 2026-01-19
0.1.0-draft · 2026-01-19
  • Initial audit spec draft generated from HTML extraction (review required).
  • Verify formulas match the calculator engine and convert any text-only formulas to LaTeX.
  • Confirm sources are authoritative and relevant to the calculator methodology.
Verified by Ugo Candido on 2026-01-19
Profile · LinkedIn
Formulas

(Formulas preserved from original page content, if present.)

Version 1.5.0
Citations

Add authoritative sources relevant to this calculator (standards bodies, manuals, official docs).

Changelog
  • 0.1.0-draft — 2026-01-19: Initial draft (review required).