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Balance versus remaining payments
Two numbers get confused. The outstanding balance is the capital you still owe right now. The total of your remaining payments is that capital plus all the interest you have yet to be charged over the rest of the term. They are not the same: the remaining-payments figure is always larger, and the difference is future interest. This is why you cannot read your true debt off the payment schedule alone.
Why it matters for early settlement
If you want to clear the loan today, you pay roughly the outstanding balance plus a little interest to the settlement date — not the full remaining-payments total. That is the whole point of a reducing-balance loan: repaying early skips the future interest you would otherwise have paid. The lender will give you an exact settlement figure that reflects the real balance.
Watching it fall
Each payment reduces the balance by its capital portion. Early on that portion is small, so the balance falls slowly; later it accelerates. An overpayment reduces the balance directly, which is why it saves interest — you are shrinking the very number the interest is calculated on. On a flat-rate product the balance concept works differently, as the interest is fixed at outset.
See how the balance falls in the repayment schedule, and ask your lender for the current figure before making any decision. To model a facility, use the calculator.
Frequently asked questions
Why is my settlement figure less than my remaining payments?
Because your remaining payments include future interest you have not yet been charged, while a settlement clears only the capital you actually owe plus interest to the settlement date. On a reducing-balance loan, paying early lets you skip most of that future interest — which is exactly why the settlement figure is lower than adding up the payments left.
Does my balance fall by the full payment amount each month?
No — only by the capital portion of each payment. The rest of the payment is interest, which does not reduce the balance. Early in the term the capital portion is small, so the balance drops slowly; later it grows and the balance falls faster. To cut the balance quickly, overpay against the capital directly.
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