Early Payoff Guide · Updated May 2026

Paying Off a Personal Loan Early: The Interest You'll Keep

Every month you carry a balance, interest works against you quietly — and the front-loading of amortization means extra payments made early are disproportionately powerful. Here's exactly how much acceleration saves at every level.

11 min read·⚠️ Estimates only — not financial advice

In This Guide

  1. How Loan Amortization Works Against You Early On
  2. Four Payoff Strategies: Actual Numbers
  3. Calculate Your Early Payoff Savings
  4. The Prepayment Penalty Question
  5. How to Direct Extra Payments: Principal vs. General
  6. The Best Sources of Extra Payoff Funds
  7. When Early Payoff Is Not the Optimal Move
  8. Refinancing vs. Early Payoff
  9. Daniel's Four Options
  10. Frequently Asked Questions

A borrower who takes four years to pay off a $15,000 personal loan at 14% APR pays $4,772 in total interest. The same borrower who pays it off in 28 months by adding $200/month pays $2,891. The difference — $1,881 — didn't go to a lender. It stayed in their account. Paying off a personal loan early isn't a dramatic financial maneuver. It's arithmetic applied consistently. The mechanism — how amortization front-loads interest and why that makes early extra payments especially powerful — is worth understanding before deciding how aggressively to pursue it.

How Loan Amortization Works Against You Early On

Every fixed payment covers two things: interest accrued since the last payment, and a reduction of outstanding principal. The split shifts across the repayment term. In early months, the balance is high, so interest is large and principal reduction is small. As the balance falls, more of each fixed payment goes to principal.

The front-loading is why extra payments made early save significantly more interest than the same payments made later. When you pay down principal in month three, you eliminate interest that would have accrued across the entire remaining 45 months. In month 40, the same dollar eliminates interest across only 8 remaining months.

Payment MonthInterest PortionPrincipal PortionInterest %Remaining Balance
Month 1$175$23643%$14,764
Month 6$165$24640%$13,992
Month 12$152$25937%$12,981
Month 24$124$28730%$10,601
Month 36$90$32122%$7,700
Month 48$5$4061%$0

$15,000 loan · 14% APR · 48-month term · $411 monthly payment

The practical implication: If you're going to accelerate payoff, starting now matters more than starting later. The same $200 extra payment made at month 6 saves approximately 3× more total interest than the same payment made at month 36 — because it eliminates interest across many more remaining months of the loan's life.

Four Payoff Strategies: Actual Numbers

$20,000 personal loan · 11.5% APR · 60-month term · Standard payment: $440/month · Total interest at full term: $6,400.

Strategy 1
Add $50/month extra
$840 saved
⏱ 8 months early · payoff at ~52 months
Effective payment: $490/mo · Total interest: ~$5,560. A small behavioral change — one fewer dinner out per month — produces certain, calculable savings.
Strategy 2 — Best Balance
Add $150/month extra
$1,990 saved
⏱ 19 months early · payoff at ~41 months
Effective payment: $590/mo · Total interest: ~$4,410. Saves 2.4× more than $50/mo extra — the nonlinear payoff of eliminating more principal faster.
Strategy 3 — Most Aggressive
Add $300/month extra
$3,310 saved
⏱ 29 months early · payoff at ~31 months
Effective payment: $740/mo · Total interest: ~$3,090. Nearly halves the repayment timeline and keeps $3,310 that would have been interest.
Strategy 4
One extra payment per year
$530 saved
⏱ 6 months early · payoff at ~54 months
One annual lump sum of $440 (one monthly payment). Ideal for funding from tax refunds or bonuses — no change to monthly cash flow, but meaningful annual savings.

Early Payoff Savings Calculator

The Prepayment Penalty Question: Check Before You Pay Extra

Before committing to an early payoff strategy, verify one thing: whether your loan carries a prepayment penalty. Structures vary — flat fee, percentage of remaining balance (1–5%), sliding scale, or a defined number of months' interest. On a $20,000 loan, a 2% penalty at month 18 costs ~$340. If your interest savings to that point were $420, the penalty consumes $340 of it — leaving a net benefit of $80.

Most reputable consumer lenders (SoFi, LightStream, Marcus, Earnest, most credit unions) do not charge prepayment penalties. Their absence should be the baseline expectation. If your existing loan carries one, model the total interest saved against the penalty at your planned payoff date and confirm the net benefit remains positive before accelerating. And when shopping for a new loan, ask about prepayment penalties explicitly during the comparison — it should influence lender selection.

How to Direct Extra Payments: Principal vs. General Payment

When you make an extra payment, the default treatment varies by lender — and the difference materially affects your savings:

Critical step: When making an extra payment, explicitly designate it as "principal reduction" or "apply to principal only." Most online loan servicers have a field for this at payment time. If the system doesn't offer a clear designation, call or message your servicer and confirm how extra payments are applied — and request that future extra payments be applied to principal unless instructed otherwise.

The Best Sources of Extra Payoff Funds

When Early Payoff Is Not the Optimal Move

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When your employer offers 401(k) matching — capture the match first
A 100% employer match on contributions up to 3% of salary is a 100% instantaneous guaranteed return. No personal loan rate comes close. Capture every dollar of employer match before allocating extra cash to loan principal. The tax-deferred compounding makes the advantage even larger across a career.
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When higher-rate debt remains outstanding — interest rate hierarchy first
If you're carrying credit card balances at 22–28% APR alongside a personal loan at 12%, every extra dollar should attack the credit card first. The personal loan payoff is more psychologically satisfying because it has a defined end date and clear balance — that's not a reason to prioritize it over higher-rate debt that costs twice as much per dollar outstanding.
🛡️
When your emergency fund is insufficient — cushion before acceleration
A $4,000 emergency fund depleted to accelerate loan payoff, then a $2,500 car repair arrives — you put the repair on a credit card at 24% APR. The interest on that new balance may exceed what the loan acceleration saved. Sequence: three to six months' essential expenses in emergency savings first, then high-rate debt elimination, then personal loan acceleration.

Refinancing vs. Early Payoff: Which Gets You Out Faster

The combined strategy — refinancing to a lower rate and maintaining the same or higher payment level — typically produces the fastest payoff and lowest total interest. The lower rate means more of each dollar goes to principal; adding extra payments compounds that effect. The two levers work together, not instead of each other.

Practical rule: within 18 months of scheduled payoff, refinancing rarely justifies the friction. With 30+ months remaining and a 2%+ rate reduction available, refinancing combined with maintained payment levels is usually the optimal path.

Daniel's Four Options: Acceleration vs. Refinancing

Daniel — $18,000 · 13.9% APR · 42 months remaining · No prepayment penalty · $487/mo standard payment

$250/month in budget flexibility after funding 401(k) match and a 6-month emergency fund. Credit score has risen from 694 (original loan) to 738 (now). Refinancing offer: 10.5% APR, 36-month term, no origination fee.

OptionMonthlyPayoff TimelineRemaining InterestSaved vs. Status Quo
A — Standard payments$48742 months$5,200
B — Add $150/mo extra$637~30 months$3,520$1,680 · 12 mo early
C — Add $250/mo extra$737~24 months$2,680$2,520 · 18 mo early
D — Refi to 10.5% + $250/mo extra ★$835~22 months$1,980$3,220 · 20 mo early
$3,220
Interest saved with Option D vs doing nothing
$700
Additional savings from refinancing vs Option C alone
22 mo
Payoff timeline vs 42 months on standard schedule

Option D wins — but only by $700 over Option C. The $250/month extra payment delivers most of the available savings whether or not he refinances. The early payoff strategy is the dominant driver. Refinancing amplifies it modestly. Daniel refinances and adds $250/month. The loan is gone in 22 months instead of 42.

Related: If Daniel's refinancing option appeals to you, see How to Compare Personal Loan Offers before applying — particularly the break-even calculation for closing costs, which determines whether the refinancing margin justifies the administrative friction at your specific remaining term and balance.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does paying off a personal loan early hurt your credit score?
Closing a loan account in good standing can produce a modest, temporary score reduction — primarily because it reduces total open accounts and may shorten average account age. For most borrowers the impact is 5–15 points and temporary. The financial benefit of eliminating interest significantly outweighs a short-lived score fluctuation for anyone not in the middle of a mortgage application or other rate-sensitive credit event. If you're applying for a major loan in the next 60–90 days, consider timing the final payoff after that application closes.
If I make extra payments, does my monthly payment go down or does my term shorten?
Under standard loan structures, your scheduled monthly payment stays fixed — extra payments reduce the principal and shorten the remaining term rather than reducing the payment amount. This is actually advantageous: the fixed payment level means all extra principal payments directly compress the timeline without reducing the acceleration you've already built in.
How do I know if my extra payments are being applied correctly?
Check your loan servicer's online account after each extra payment. Your principal balance should reflect the reduction immediately or within one to two business days. If the balance doesn't change as expected — or if your "next payment due date" advances instead — contact your servicer and confirm how the payment was applied. Request confirmation in writing that extra payments are designated for principal reduction.
Is it better to make larger monthly payments or occasional large lump sums?
Both work — total interest savings from either approach over the same period are roughly equivalent, since interest is calculated on the outstanding balance at each point in time. Regular monthly extra payments offer automation: consistent behavior without repeated decisions. Lump sums offer flexibility: deploy windfalls when they arise without committing to a higher fixed payment. Many borrowers do both — a modest monthly addition plus annual lump sums from tax refunds or bonuses.
What if I can only afford $20–$30 extra per month — is it worth it?
Yes, meaningfully so — especially early in the repayment term. On a $12,000 loan at 14% with 48 months remaining, an extra $25/month saves approximately $520 in interest and shortens payoff by about 4 months. The savings are smaller than more aggressive strategies, but they're real and certain. Every dollar of principal eliminated early stops generating interest for the remaining life of the loan. Start with what's available. Scale up as cash flow allows.

The Interest Is Calculated. You Decide How Much of It You Pay.

When you signed your loan documents, the full amortization schedule was already computed. Extra payments cut it short. The return is exactly equal to your loan's interest rate, risk-free, on every dollar of principal you retire ahead of schedule.

Calculate My Early Payoff Savings

⚠️ Estimates only — confirm prepayment terms with your lender before accelerating payments.

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