Car Loans

Negative Equity Car Loan Calculator: What Happens When Your Trade-In Is Upside Down

Estimate how negative equity from a trade-in rolls into a new car loan and raises your payment.

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Rollover example: $32,000 financed

A $27,000 car plus a $5,000 upside-down trade-in becomes a $32,000 loan before tax and fees.

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All fields update the payment as you type.

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Optional. Reduces taxable amount in most states.
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Applied to price minus trade-in. Leave 0 if tax is already included.
Monthly payment after rolling in the gap
$634
Over 60 months at 7.50% APR

Loan amount $30,000
Monthly payment $601
Total interest $6,069
Total of payments $36,069
Out-the-door cost $41,069
Use this same loan in the full car payment calculator →
Where the financed money goes
Principal
83%
Interest
17%

Plain English: this shows how much of your loan cost is the car itself versus the lender's interest.

Quick answer: negative equity is old debt looking for a new car

Negative equity means you owe more on your car than it is worth.

If your loan payoff is 22,000 dollars and your car is worth 17,000 dollars, you have 5,000 dollars of negative equity.

That 5,000 dollars does not vanish when you trade the car. It either gets paid in cash, or it follows you into the next loan like a very boring ghost.

Here is the simple formula:

Current loan payoff - current car value = negative equity

So:

22,000 dollars - 17,000 dollars = 5,000 dollars of negative equity

The dealer may call it a “rollover.” That sounds soft. Like a dog trick. It is not soft. It means old debt gets added to the new car loan.

Once you see that, the payment starts making more sense.

Use the calculator to estimate the rollover payment

Use the embedded car payment calculator on this page to test the monthly payment after old debt gets rolled into the next loan.

The preset example starts with a 27,000 dollar car plus 5,000 dollars of negative equity. That means the calculator starts at 32,000 dollars financed before tax, fees, or down payment.

For the cleanest math, gather four numbers first:

  • Current loan payoff: what your lender says you owe today.
  • Current car value: a real trade offer or cash offer.
  • New car price: the price before old debt gets added.
  • Loan terms: APR and months.

APR means annual percentage rate. it is the yearly cost of borrowing money.

If the calculator does not have a separate “current payoff” field, use this workaround.

First, calculate your gap. Then add that gap to the new amount you plan to finance.

Example:

  • New car price: 27,000 dollars.
  • Negative equity: 5,000 dollars.
  • Amount before tax, fees, and down payment: 32,000 dollars.

That 32,000 dollar number is the honest starting point. The dealer payment may look nicer. The math is less interested in being charming.

How to calculate negative equity on your car

Do not use the old balance from last month.

Ask your lender for a payoff quote. A payoff quote is the amount needed to close the loan today. It can include daily interest and fees.

Then get a realistic car value. Use a dealer trade offer, online cash offer, or private sale estimate.

Private sale may be higher. Trade-in may be easier. Easier is nice. Expensive is less nice.

ItemAmountWhat it means
Loan payoff22,000 dollarsWhat you still owe
Trade-in value17,000 dollarsWhat the car is worth to the dealer
Negative equity5,000 dollarsOld debt with no car value behind it

If the value is higher than the payoff, you have positive equity.

If the value equals the payoff, you are even.

If the payoff is higher than the value, you are upside down.

Upside down is not a moral failure. Cars lose value fast. Loans move slower. That is the trap.

Example: a 5,000 dollar gap can add about 99 dollars a month

Let us use real numbers.

You want a 27,000 dollar car. Your old car has 5,000 dollars of negative equity. You finance for 60 months at 7% APR.

Without the old debt, a 27,000 dollar loan costs about 535 dollars a month.

With the old debt, a 32,000 dollar loan costs about 634 dollars a month.

That old car adds about 99 dollars every month.

It also adds about 940 dollars of interest over five years.

ScenarioAmount financedPayment at 7% for 60 monthsTotal interest
New car only27,000 dollars535 dollars/month5,078 dollars
New car plus 5,000 dollar gap32,000 dollars634 dollars/month6,018 dollars
Cost of old debt5,000 dollars99 dollars/month940 dollars

That is the part dealers often hide inside the payment.

They do not have to say, “Congratulations, you are now paying for a car you no longer own.” They can just show you one monthly number.

That is why you check the math first.

What 5,000, 10,000, and 15,000 dollars of negative equity can cost

Negative equity gets heavier as the gap grows.

At 7% APR for 60 months, each 5,000 dollars of old debt adds about 99 dollars per month.

Negative equity rolled inAdded paymentAdded interestTotal paid for old debt
5,000 dollars99 dollars/month940 dollars5,940 dollars
10,000 dollars198 dollars/month1,881 dollars11,881 dollars
15,000 dollars297 dollars/month2,821 dollars17,821 dollars

That is why long loans feel helpful at first.

A 72-month or 84-month loan can make the monthly payment look smaller. But it can also keep you underwater longer.

That is not a rescue plan. That is moving the furniture around while the kitchen is on fire.

Should you roll negative equity into a new car loan?

Usually, no.

Rolling negative equity makes sense only when the current car is unsafe, unreliable, or creating bigger costs than the loan gap.

Even then, keep the next car boring.

Boring is underrated. Boring starts every morning. Boring does not need a 15,000 dollar warranty package and a speech from someone named Brad in finance.

Before you roll the gap, ask three questions:

  1. Can I keep the current car for six more months?
  2. Can I pay down part of the gap in cash?
  3. Can I buy a cheaper replacement car?

If the answer is yes to any of those, test that option first.

The goal is not to win the dealership visit. The goal is to leave with a payment that does not eat your life.

How dealers show negative equity in the contract

A dealer can be honest and still make the deal confusing.

Look for these numbers before you sign:

  • Trade allowance: what they give you for your old car.
  • Payoff amount: what they send to your old lender.
  • Difference: the negative equity.
  • Selling price: the real price of the new car.
  • Add-ons: warranties, protection plans, service contracts, and fees.
  • Amount financed: the total loan before interest.
  • APR: the yearly borrowing cost.
  • Term: how many months you pay.

The danger is payment shopping.

Payment shopping means you focus only on the monthly number. The dealer can lower that number by stretching the loan longer.

A 634 dollar payment for 60 months is not the same as a 560 dollar payment for 84 months.

The lower payment may cost more in the end. That is the tiny magic trick. No cape required.

Safer ways to handle an upside-down car loan

You have options. None are perfect. Perfect left the building when the loan got bigger than the car.

But some options are safer than rolling old debt into new debt.

Keep the car and pay down the gap

If the car runs well, this is often the cleanest fix.

Paying an extra 200 dollars a month for six months lowers the balance by about 1,200 dollars, plus a little interest saved.

That can turn a 5,000 dollar gap into about 3,800 dollars.

Still annoying. Less dangerous.

Pay cash toward the old gap

If you have cash, use part of it to reduce the rollover.

If you pay 2,000 dollars toward a 5,000 dollar gap, only 3,000 dollars follows you.

At 7% for 60 months, that cuts the added payment from about 99 dollars to about 59 dollars.

Sell private party if the value is higher

A dealer may offer 17,000 dollars. A private buyer may pay 19,000 dollars.

That 2,000 dollar difference matters.

It can reduce the gap before the next loan starts.

Buy a cheaper car

This is not glamorous advice.

It is also the advice that works.

If you planned to buy a 32,000 dollar car, test a 24,000 dollar car. The old debt still hurts, but the total loan may stay manageable.

Refinance with caution

Refinance means replacing your current loan with a new one.

It can help if your rate drops and the fees are low.

It does not fix negative equity by itself. It may only make the same problem wear a nicer jacket.

What to check next

Before you trade in an upside-down car, do this in order:

  1. Get a same-day payoff quote from your lender.
  2. Get at least two car value estimates.
  3. Calculate the gap: payoff minus value.
  4. Run the new car payment without the gap.
  5. Run the payment with the gap added.
  6. Compare both payments to your real monthly budget.
  7. Check the contract for amount financed, APR, term, and add-ons.

If the rolled-debt payment only works when nothing goes wrong, it does not work.

Cars need tires. People need groceries. Life loves plot twists.

Frequently asked questions

Can I trade in a car with negative equity?

Yes. Many dealers will take the trade.

But the old debt still has to be paid. You either pay the difference in cash, or the dealer rolls it into the new loan.

How do I calculate negative equity on my car loan?

Subtract your car value from your loan payoff.

If your payoff is 22,000 dollars and the car is worth 17,000 dollars, the negative equity is 5,000 dollars.

How much does 5,000 dollars of negative equity add to a car payment?

At 7% APR for 60 months, 5,000 dollars adds about 99 dollars per month.

It also adds about 940 dollars in interest over the loan.

Is it bad to roll negative equity into a new car loan?

It is risky.

You start the new loan owing more than the new car is worth. That can trap you if you need to sell, refinance, or trade again.

Can a dealer hide negative equity in the payment?

They can make it hard to see.

Check the trade allowance, payoff amount, amount financed, APR, term, and add-ons. The amount financed tells the truth when the monthly payment gets cute.

Should I pay off negative equity before buying another car?

If you can, yes.

Even paying part of the gap helps. Paying 2,000 dollars toward a 5,000 dollar gap can cut the added payment by about 40 dollars a month.

Can I refinance a car loan with negative equity?

Sometimes.

A lender may refinance if your credit, income, car value, and loan balance fit their rules. But refinancing does not erase the gap. It only changes the loan terms.

What is the fastest way to get out of an upside-down car loan?

Keep the car, avoid new add-ons, and pay extra toward the principal.

Principal means the actual loan balance, not interest. Paying principal is how you shrink the debt itself.

Even 150 dollars extra per month for one year can cut the balance by about 1,800 dollars before interest savings.

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