
- APR
- 6.94–14.94%
- Min. credit
- 660+
- Loan amount
- $5K–$100K
- Term
- 24–84 mo
Free calculator · no signup
The 10% rule: total monthly car costs (loan, insurance, fuel, maintenance) should stay under 10% of your gross monthly income. Adjust the inputs to find your number.
In plain English
At $72,000/year of gross income, you can afford a car priced up to ~$22,463 ($3,000 down + $19,463 loan at 7.50% APR over 60 months). That's $390/mo for the loan, leaving ~$210/mo for insurance, fuel, and maintenance.
Split assumes ~35% of your transportation budget goes to insurance, fuel, and maintenance — leaving ~65% for the loan payment. Adjust your budget if you have lower insurance costs or a paid-off second vehicle.
Editorial methodology
The calculator above blends two industry-standard rules (28/36 + 10%) with debt-to-income context to estimate the most car you can responsibly finance. Here's exactly how the math works — and the four mistakes that blow up most car-buying budgets.
The 28/36 rule is the household-debt framework lenders have used since the early 1980s — originally codified by the FHA for mortgage underwriting, then adopted by auto, credit card, and personal-loan lenders. It says no more than 28% of your gross monthly income should go to housing (mortgage, rent, taxes, insurance) and no more than 36% should go to ALL household debt combined (housing + auto + student loans + credit cards + personal loans).
For an auto-loan applicant earning $75,000/year ($6,250/mo gross), the 36% ceiling caps total household debt at $2,250/mo. If your rent or mortgage already runs $1,500/mo and student loans add $400/mo, you have $350/mo of headroom for the car payment — and that's before insurance, fuel, or maintenance. The calculator uses your annual income and a conservative 25% transportation-budget slice of gross to model how the 36% ceiling translates into a buyable car price.
Many lenders will technically approve loans that push household debt to 40–45% of gross — but at those ratios you're one missed paycheck or insurance claim from default. The 36% ceiling is a buyer-protection guardrail, not a regulatory one.
The 10% rule is the editorial complement to 28/36. It says your total transportation cost — loan payment, insurance, fuel, maintenance, parking, and tolls — should not exceed 10% of your gross monthly income. For the $75,000-earner above, that's $625/mo for everything related to owning the car, not just the loan.
This is the rule most buyers violate, because dealer financing conversations focus exclusively on the loan payment. A $400/mo payment looks affordable in isolation — but layered with $150/mo insurance, $200/mo fuel, $50/mo maintenance reserve, and $50/mo parking, the all-in cost crests $850/mo. That's 13.6% of the budget on a $75k income — outside the 10% guardrail and a major contributing factor to the 30%+ delinquency rate Experian reports on subprime auto loans.
The calculator's "all-in monthly budget" tile shows the 10% cap explicitly. The split assumes ~35% of the transportation budget goes to insurance, fuel, and maintenance — leaving the remaining 65% for the loan payment.
Debt-to-income is the formal version of the 28/36 rule that auto lenders run on every application. They compute DTI as total monthly debt obligations divided by gross monthly income. Most national lenders quote tier-1 APRs only at DTI under 35%, prime APRs at DTI 35–43%, and require specialized underwriting above 43%. Above 50% DTI, the loan is functionally a deep-subprime product and the APR penalty often exceeds 8 points.
DTI is also why the calculator asks for your gross income — not net. Lenders price against gross because that's what they can verify on a paystub or tax return. Net income varies with state tax, 401(k) contributions, and HSA elections, none of which lenders adjudicate. If your DTI is borderline, every additional $100 of monthly debt (a new credit card, a personal loan, a co-signed lease) can bump you into the next APR tier.
You can lower DTI before applying by paying down credit cards (immediate effect on the next statement), refinancing existing high-rate debt, or removing a co-signed account you're no longer responsible for. See our DTI glossary entry for the full calculation and lender-by-lender thresholds.
The calculator above has four inputs. Each maps to a specific lever in the affordability math + a specific decision a lender will make about your application.
Budgeting only the loan payment — not the all-in cost
The single most common mistake. A car that's 'affordable' at $400/mo loan payment can easily run $700–900/mo all-in once insurance, fuel, maintenance, parking, and tolls are included. The 10% rule corrects this by capping ALL transportation cost at 10% of gross income — not just the payment.
Stretching the term to make a more expensive car 'fit'
A $35,000 car at 72 months looks like a $550/mo payment. The same car at 60 months runs $650/mo. The 72-month option is rarely the right choice — you pay ~$2,500 more in total interest, stay underwater 18+ months longer, and face higher insurance gap-coverage costs.
Ignoring the trade-in's negative equity
If you owe $18,000 on your trade and the dealer values it at $14,000, you're $4,000 underwater. Rolling that into the new loan inflates principal by $4k and pushes your loan-to-value over 100% — which usually triggers a 1–2 APR-point penalty.
Treating dealer financing as 'just the rate they offered'
Dealer financing typically marks up the lender's buy-rate by 1–3 APR points. A pre-approval from a credit union or direct lender eliminates this markup. The single fastest way to save $1,000+ on the loan is to walk in pre-approved.
Next step
Walking into the dealer with a pre-approval from a credit union or direct lender is the single fastest way to lock out dealer financing markup (typically 1–3 APR points). Soft credit pull, 60 seconds, no impact to your score.
Pre-qualify with 3+ auto-loan lendersRates as of Jun 14, 2026
Live APR ranges from the lenders our editors evaluated using rates, terms, application, and support sub-scores. Apply through any to lock in your real rate.
Comparing 5 lenders· Rates verified Jun 14
Data last reviewed . Source: CarSavr editorial methodology.
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| Lender | Loan amount | Term | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 ![]() | 6.94–14.94% Total int. ~$4,659 · $25k · 60mo | 660+ | $5K–$100K | 24–84 mo | Reviewed today | |
2 Best marketplace | 5.69–17.99% Total int. ~$3,783 · $25k · 60mo | 580+ | $5K–$100K | 24–84 mo | Reviewed today | |
3 ![]() Best credit union | 5.24–17.99% Total int. ~$3,472 · $25k · 60mo | 610+ | $500–$150K | 36–84 mo | Reviewed today | |
![]() Fastest marketplace · 4 offers in minutes | 5.99–22.99% Total int. ~$3,992 · $25k · 60mo | 575+ | $8K–$100K | 24–84 mo | Reviewed today | |
![]() Best soft-pull pre-qual | 6.99–22.90% Total int. ~$4,695 · $25k · 60mo | 540+ | $4K–$75K | 36–75 mo | Reviewed today |




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