How to Calculate Business Loan Payments: Formulas, Examples, and Tools
Learn how to calculate business loan payments with formulas, examples, and comparisons. Covers amortizing loans, factor rates, and payment-to-revenue ratios.
How to Calculate Business Loan Payments: Formulas, Examples, and Tools
Understanding how business loan payments are calculated is essential for making informed borrowing decisions. Before you sign a loan agreement, you need to know exactly how much you will pay each month, how much total interest you will owe over the life of the loan, and how different variables like loan amount, interest rate, and term length affect your costs.
This guide breaks down the math behind business loan payments, provides worked examples for the most common loan types, and helps you evaluate whether a given loan fits your budget.
The Basic Loan Payment Formula
The standard formula for calculating a fixed monthly payment on an amortizing loan is:
M = P x [r(1 + r)^n] / [(1 + r)^n - 1]
Where:
- M = Monthly payment
- P = Principal (the loan amount)
- r = Monthly interest rate (annual rate divided by 12)
- n = Total number of monthly payments (term in years multiplied by 12)
Example 1: Standard Term Loan
Loan amount: $100,000 Annual interest rate: 10% Term: 5 years (60 months)
Step 1: Convert the annual rate to monthly: 10% / 12 = 0.00833
Step 2: Calculate total payments: 5 years x 12 = 60 months
Step 3: Apply the formula: M = $100,000 x [0.00833(1.00833)^60] / [(1.00833)^60 - 1] M = $100,000 x [0.00833 x 1.6453] / [1.6453 - 1] M = $100,000 x [0.01371] / [0.6453] M = $100,000 x 0.02125 M = $2,125 per month
Total payments over 5 years: $2,125 x 60 = $127,500 Total interest paid: $127,500 - $100,000 = $27,500
Example 2: Shorter Term, Higher Rate
Loan amount: $50,000 Annual interest rate: 15% Term: 3 years (36 months)
Monthly rate: 15% / 12 = 0.0125 Number of payments: 36
M = $50,000 x [0.0125(1.0125)^36] / [(1.0125)^36 - 1] M = $50,000 x [0.0125 x 1.5639] / [1.5639 - 1] M = $50,000 x [0.01955] / [0.5639] M = $50,000 x 0.03467 M = $1,733 per month
Total payments: $1,733 x 36 = $62,388 Total interest: $62,388 - $50,000 = $12,388
Understanding Different Payment Structures
Fixed Monthly Payments (Amortizing Loans)
Most SBA loans, bank term loans, and many alternative lender products use fixed monthly payments. Each payment includes both principal and interest. Early payments are mostly interest; later payments are mostly principal. This is the most common structure and the easiest to budget for.
Daily or Weekly Payments
Many alternative lenders and merchant cash advances structure repayment as daily or weekly debits from your business bank account. To estimate your daily payment from an annual cost:
Example: $50,000 loan with a 1.3 factor rate (total repayment of $65,000) over 12 months
- Total repayment: $50,000 x 1.3 = $65,000
- Daily payment: $65,000 / 252 business days = $258 per day
- Weekly payment: $65,000 / 52 weeks = $1,250 per week
Interest-Only Payments
Some loans offer an interest-only period (typically six to twelve months) before principal repayment begins. During this period, your payments are lower, but you are not reducing the balance.
Example: $100,000 at 10% annual rate, interest-only
- Monthly interest-only payment: $100,000 x 0.10 / 12 = $833 per month
After the interest-only period ends, your payments jump because you must repay the full principal over the remaining term.
Lines of Credit
Lines of credit charge interest only on the outstanding drawn balance, not the total credit limit. If you have a $100,000 line of credit at 12% but have only drawn $30,000:
- Monthly interest: $30,000 x 0.12 / 12 = $300 per month
Factor Rates vs. Interest Rates
Many alternative lenders and merchant cash advance providers quote a factor rate rather than an interest rate. A factor rate is a multiplier applied to the loan amount to determine total repayment.
Example: $40,000 with a 1.25 factor rate
- Total repayment: $40,000 x 1.25 = $50,000
- Total cost of borrowing: $10,000
To compare a factor rate to an APR, you need to know the repayment term:
- If repaid over 12 months: effective APR is approximately 45%
- If repaid over 6 months: effective APR is approximately 90%
The shorter the term, the higher the effective APR for a given factor rate. Always calculate the effective APR so you can compare offers on equal footing.
How to Evaluate Whether a Loan Payment Fits Your Budget
The Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR)
Lenders use DSCR to evaluate whether your business can afford a loan payment. The formula is:
DSCR = Net Operating Income / Total Debt Service
- Net Operating Income = Revenue minus operating expenses (before debt payments)
- Total Debt Service = All loan payments (new and existing)
A DSCR of 1.25 or higher is generally considered healthy. This means your business generates 25 percent more income than needed to cover all debt payments.
Example: Your business generates $15,000 in monthly net operating income. Your existing debt payments are $2,000 per month. A new loan would add $3,000 per month.
DSCR = $15,000 / ($2,000 + $3,000) = $15,000 / $5,000 = 3.0 (excellent)
The Payment-to-Revenue Ratio
A simpler rule of thumb: your total monthly debt payments should not exceed 20 to 25 percent of your monthly gross revenue.
Example: Monthly revenue of $50,000. Maximum comfortable debt service: $10,000 to $12,500 per month.
Key Variables That Affect Your Payment
Loan amount. All else being equal, a larger loan means a larger payment. Borrow only what you need.
Interest rate. Even small rate differences compound significantly over time. A 2 percentage point difference on a $100,000 five-year loan changes your total interest by roughly $5,500.
Term length. Longer terms mean lower monthly payments but more total interest. A $100,000 loan at 10% costs $2,125/month over 5 years (total interest: $27,500) versus $1,322/month over 10 years (total interest: $58,580).
Payment frequency. Daily payments are smaller individually but can strain your daily cash flow. Monthly payments are larger but give you more flexibility in managing your cash within each month.
Make Smarter Borrowing Decisions with Brevo Capital
Understanding your loan payments before you borrow puts you in control of your financing decisions. At Brevo Capital, we help business owners compare offers from multiple lenders so you can evaluate payment amounts, total costs, and terms side by side.
Apply now and see exactly what your business qualifies for.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I calculate my business loan payment without a formula?
Most business loan websites offer free calculators. Input your loan amount, interest rate, and term to see your estimated monthly payment. You can also use spreadsheet software — in Excel or Google Sheets, the PMT function calculates loan payments: =PMT(rate/12, term_months, -principal).
What is a good interest rate for a business loan?
It depends on the type of financing. SBA loans range from 6 to 13 percent. Bank term loans range from 7 to 15 percent. Alternative lenders range from 10 to 30 percent or higher. Your credit score, time in business, and revenue all affect the rate you receive.
Should I choose a shorter or longer loan term?
Shorter terms mean higher monthly payments but less total interest. Longer terms mean lower monthly payments but more total interest. Choose the term that keeps your monthly payment comfortable while minimizing total borrowing costs. A good balance is usually the shortest term you can afford without straining cash flow.
How do I compare a factor rate to an interest rate?
Convert the factor rate to an approximate APR. Subtract 1 from the factor rate, divide by the fraction of the year the loan covers, then multiply by 2 (to account for declining principal). For example, a 1.3 factor rate over 12 months is approximately (0.3 / 1) x 2 = 60% APR. This is an approximation — ask lenders for the exact APR.
Can I pay off a business loan early?
It depends on the loan terms. Some loans have prepayment penalties, others do not. SBA loans have no prepayment penalty on loans with terms under 15 years. Alternative lenders vary. Always ask about prepayment terms before signing.
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