Simulador de Financiamento de Carro

O Simulador de Financiamento de Carro calcula a parcela mensal exata, o total que você pagará e o custo dos juros do financiamento de um veículo. Insira o preço do carro, a entrada, possível troca/desconto, a taxa de juros (CET anual) e o prazo em meses. A calculadora aplica a fórmula padrão de amortização (Tabela Price) e mostra os números reais — sem otimismo de vendedor.

Calculate your monthly auto loan payment plus total interest you'll pay over the life of the loan. Educational only — get an actual quote from your lender for the real numbers.

Negotiated price including taxes & fees if rolled into loan.

10-20% recommended; reduces interest paid.

Use Kelley Blue Book trade-in (not retail) value.

Cash incentives applied to loan principal.

Excellent credit: 4-6%. Fair credit: 8-12%. Subprime: 15%+.

Shorter = less interest. Longer = lower payment.

Monthly payment
$528.29/mo
For 60 months. Total paid: $31,697 · Interest cost: $4,697
Loan amount
$27,000
Total interest
$4,697
Total paid
$31,697
Educational tool only. Not financial advice. Real loan offers include taxes, fees, optional insurance, and dealer add-ons that may not be in your inputs. Get a written quote from your lender or credit union for actual terms.

Como usar

  1. 1

    Informe o preço total do veículo (já com taxas se rolar para dentro do financiamento).

  2. 2

    Informe a entrada (10-30% recomendado).

  3. 3

    Informe troca ou desconto da concessionária, se houver.

  4. 4

    Informe a taxa de juros anual (CET) — financiamentos brasileiros vão de 1,5% a 3% ao mês (~20-43% ao ano).

  5. 5

    Escolha o prazo (24-60 meses comum). Quanto mais longo, mais juros você paga no total.

Perguntas frequentes

Ratings & Reviews

Rate this tool

Sign in to rate and review this tool.

Loading reviews…

How the Car Loan Calculator Works

The math is standard loan amortization. The Microapp calculator handles the car-specific framing: vehicle price minus down payment minus trade-in minus rebate equals loan principal. That principal, plus the APR and term, determines the monthly payment via the formula:

M = P × [r(1+r)n] / [(1+r)n − 1]

where P is the principal, r is the monthly interest rate (APR ÷ 12), and n is the number of months.

Worked example. $30,000 vehicle. $3,000 down. No trade-in. No rebate. 6.5% APR. 60-month term.
• Loan principal: $30,000 − $3,000 = $27,000
• Monthly rate: 6.5% / 12 = 0.5417%
• Monthly payment: $27,000 × [0.005417 × 1.005417⁶⁰] / [1.005417⁶⁰ − 1] ≈ $528/month
• Total paid: $528 × 60 = $31,680
• Total interest: $31,680 − $27,000 = $4,680

The Four Levers That Change Your Payment

1. Loan principal. Lower it via larger down payment, higher trade-in value, or rebates. Every $1,000 of principal at 6% APR over 60 months adds about $19/month to the payment.

2. APR. The biggest difference between a great deal and a bad one. A $25,000 loan over 60 months at 5% APR vs 12% APR = $472/mo vs $556/mo, and total interest $3,300 vs $8,400. APR is determined by your credit score and chosen lender — both are negotiable.

3. Term length. Longer terms lower the monthly payment but raise total interest paid. Industry has been pushing 72-84 month auto loans because the lower payment lets buyers afford more car. Math says: shorter is always cheaper in total cost.

4. Down payment. Larger down = smaller principal = smaller payment + less interest + lower risk of being underwater.

Realistic APR by Credit Score (2026)

Credit scoreTierTypical new-car APRTypical used-car APR
781-850Super prime4-6%5-7%
661-780Prime6-8%7-10%
601-660Near prime9-12%11-14%
501-600Subprime13-17%16-20%
300-500Deep subprime17-21%+20-25%+

Numbers are illustrative; actual rates depend on lender, vehicle, term, and economic conditions. The Federal Reserve's interest rate moves shift all these by 1-2 percentage points over a typical year.

The "60 Months Is the Sweet Spot" Argument

For most buyers with prime+ credit, 60 months (5 years) hits a balance:

  • Long enough to keep the monthly payment manageable on a typical $25-40k vehicle
  • Short enough to avoid being underwater for years
  • Most lenders' best APR rates are on 60-month terms (rates often jump for 72/84-month)
  • The car is paid off before major repair costs typically hit (~year 6-7)

72/84 month loans make sense in narrow cases: very low APR (0% manufacturer financing), buying a vehicle expected to last 10+ years, or genuinely needing the lower payment to afford the car at all. They cost more in total interest and increase upside-down risk.

The Down Payment Math

A car typically loses 20% of value in year one, 10% each year after. With minimal down payment + long loan term, you're underwater for most of the loan. Example:

ScenarioDown paymentWhen loan equals valueTime underwater
$30k car, 60mo, 5% APR$0 (0%)Month 363 years
$30k car, 60mo, 5% APR$3,000 (10%)Month 181.5 years
$30k car, 60mo, 5% APR$6,000 (20%)Month 0Never
$30k car, 84mo, 7% APR$0 (0%)Month 60+5+ years

Pre-Approval Before the Dealer

Get pre-approved through your bank or credit union BEFORE visiting a dealer. Why:

  1. You walk in with a known APR. The dealer's offer can be compared head-to-head.
  2. Dealers often add ~1-2 percentage points to the rate they get from their lenders (markup) — knowing the wholesale rate stops this.
  3. You're treated as a cash buyer, which strengthens your negotiating position on the vehicle price itself.
  4. Pre-approval ties up financing in one place — no last-minute rate surprises.

Credit unions almost always beat banks on auto rates. PenFed, Navy Federal, and regional credit unions specifically. Worth joining one before car shopping.

Common Pitfalls

Focusing on monthly payment, not total cost. A "low monthly payment" hides the true cost of long-term + high-APR loans. Always look at total interest paid alongside the monthly number.

Negotiating monthly payment instead of price. Dealers love this — they can hit the monthly target by extending the loan. Negotiate the vehicle price first, then financing terms separately.

Skipping the trade-in research. The dealer's first trade-in offer is usually 20-30% below Kelley Blue Book trade-in value. Get appraisals from CarMax, Carvana, or your bank for comparison.

Rolling negative equity into the new loan. If you're upside down on your current car and the dealer rolls the gap into your new loan, you start the new loan already underwater. Pay off the existing loan separately if possible.

Adding dealer 'extras'. Extended warranties, GAP insurance, paint protection, fabric protection — most are overpriced through the dealer. GAP insurance is genuinely useful but costs $200-400 from your insurance company vs $500-1,000 added to the loan.

Educational Tool — Not Financial Advice

This calculator computes standard amortization. It doesn't account for sales tax (varies by state), title and registration fees, dealer documentation fees, mandatory insurance requirements, or any after-sale add-ons. Get a written breakdown from your lender showing all-in costs before signing.

Related Tools

For general loan amortization (not car-specific), use the Loan Calculator. For projecting the savings if you invest the would-be car payment instead, the Compound Interest Calculator handles that. To track car loans against your overall financial picture, the Net Worth Calculator includes auto loans as a liability category.