Before you sign a loan agreement, you need to know the real monthly cost — not just the rate. This EMI calculator takes your loan principal, the bank’s annual interest rate, and the tenure in months and gives you the exact fixed payment you owe every month. It also reveals the full amortization split: how much of each payment covers interest charges versus how much is actually reducing your outstanding debt. If you are borrowing from a Pakistani bank at KIBOR-linked rates, enter the full blended rate (KIBOR + bank margin) exactly as quoted in your sanction letter.
What Is an EMI Calculator?
An EMI (Equated Monthly Installment) calculator tells you exactly how much you will pay each month on a fixed-rate loan. The monthly payment is constant throughout the loan term and consists of two components: an interest portion (higher in early months) and a principal repayment portion (growing over time). This is called an amortizing loan.
This tool is most commonly used for car loans, personal loans, and home financing in Pakistan, where most bank lending follows the standard EMI structure pegged to KIBOR rates.
How to Use This Calculator
- Type in the loan principal in PKR — this is the amount disbursed by the bank, not the total repayable.
- Enter your annual interest rate. Check your loan sanction letter. Pakistani bank rates in 2026 typically range from 14–20% depending on product type and your credit profile (KIBOR ± bank margin).
- Enter the loan tenure in months. A 5-year car loan = 60 months; a 20-year mortgage = 240 months.
- Hit Calculate EMI to instantly see your monthly installment, total interest burden, and a month-by-month amortization breakdown for the first 12 months — so you can see how quickly you're actually paying down your debt.
EMI Formula (Standard Amortization)
EMI = P × r × (1 + r)ⁿ ÷ [(1 + r)ⁿ − 1]
Where:
P = Principal loan amount
r = Monthly interest rate (Annual rate ÷ 12 ÷ 100)
n = Total number of months (loan tenure)
Worked Example
You borrow PKR 2,500,000 to buy a car at 18% annual interest for 4 years (48 months).
- Monthly rate (r): 18 ÷ 12 ÷ 100 = 0.015 (1.5%)
- EMI: 2,500,000 × 0.015 × (1.015)ℤ⁴ ÷ [(1.015)ℤ⁴ − 1] = PKR 73,538/month
- Total paid: 73,538 × 48 = PKR 3,529,824
- Total interest: 3,529,824 − 2,500,000 = PKR 1,029,824 (41% of principal)
This illustrates why high interest rates are expensive — you pay back nearly PKR 3.5 million on a PKR 2.5 million car.
Practical Use Cases
- Comparing loan offers: Run two scenarios — one with a 5-year tenure and one with 3 years — and compare total interest paid. The shorter tenure always saves more despite higher monthly payments.
- Affordability check: Banks in Pakistan typically require your EMI to be no more than 40% of your net monthly salary. If your salary is PKR 150,000, your maximum affordable EMI is PKR 60,000.
- Prepayment planning: Use the amortization schedule to see exactly how much of your early payments goes to interest. Making even one or two extra payments in the first year can save disproportionately large amounts of interest.
- Islamic banking: Murabaha-based car financing has a different cost structure. This calculator covers conventional interest-based lending only.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Forgetting processing fees: Banks charge 1–3% processing/documentation fees upfront. This is separate from your EMI. A PKR 2,000,000 loan with 2% processing adds PKR 40,000 to your immediate cost.
- Using the annual rate as the monthly rate: A 15% annual rate is NOT 15% per month — it is 1.25% per month. Applying the annual rate directly to EMI formula gives a wildly wrong result.
- Ignoring insurance requirements: Car loans in Pakistan require comprehensive insurance for the loan duration, adding PKR 20,000–80,000+ per year to the total ownership cost. Budget for this separately.
Accuracy Notes
This calculator uses the standard fixed-rate amortization formula. It does not handle variable-rate (floating KIBOR) loans where the interest rate — and therefore EMI — changes with monetary policy decisions by the State Bank of Pakistan. For KIBOR-linked loans, recalculate your EMI whenever the policy rate changes. The tool also excludes late payment penalties, insurance premiums, and tracker fees.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does my EMI change if KIBOR changes?
Yes, if your loan is floating-rate (linked to KIBOR + margin). When the State Bank of Pakistan raises or cuts the policy rate, KIBOR moves and your EMI is revised by the bank, usually at the next repricing date stated in your loan agreement.
Can I reduce my EMI by prepaying part of the principal?
Yes. A partial prepayment reduces the outstanding principal balance, lowering the interest charged on subsequent months. Depending on your bank, this either reduces your EMI or shortens your remaining tenure.
What happens if I miss an EMI payment?
Banks typically charge a late payment fee and report the missed payment to eCIB (Electronic Credit Information Bureau), damaging your credit score. After multiple missed payments, the loan may be classified as non-performing, triggering legal recovery processes.
Is a shorter loan tenure always better?
From a total cost perspective, yes — shorter tenures always result in less total interest paid. However, the higher monthly payment must fit within your budget and the 40% EMI-to-income guideline. The best tenure is the shortest one you can comfortably afford.
Is this the same formula used for home loans?
Yes. Personal loans, auto loans, and mortgage loans all use the same amortization formula. The difference lies in the interest rate, tenure, and the collateral involved — the math is identical.
📅 Last Updated: April 2026
📋 Based on State Bank of Pakistan lending standards and KIBOR 2026 rates