Business Line of Credit Payment Calculator

By Marcus Delaney, former commercial loan officer · Updated June 2026 · 2 sources

Advertising disclosure: BizBee is reader-supported. Some links on this page (including our lender marketplace) are affiliate links, marked as sponsored. If you apply or fund through them we may earn a commission — at no extra cost to you. It never changes what this calculator shows you, and we don’t take payment to rank one lender over another. See How We Make Money.

Not a lender. Informational only — not financial advice. BizBee does not lend money or broker loans. These are estimates only; your actual rate, fees, and payment are set by your lender and will vary.

Type in what you’d draw, the rate you were quoted, and how long you’d take to pay it back. The calculator does the math instantly, right in your browser. Nothing is sent to a server, and nothing here is a quote or an offer — these are estimates only.

Estimate your payment

The amount you plan to draw from the line.

Enter the APR your lender quoted. We don’t supply a rate — 15% is a neutral placeholder, not a market rate or a quote. Overwrite it with your number.

For a term repayment of a single draw. Revolving lines may not have a fixed term — see the note below.

Estimates only
Estimated monthly payment
$4,513
Total interest paid
$4,155
Total repaid
$54,155

Based on $50,000 drawn at 15% APR over 12 months — estimate only.

Interest-only monthly cost revolving
$625

If you’re using this as a revolving line and only paying interest on your balance, roughly this much per month — before any draw or maintenance fees. You still owe the principal.

Estimates only. Not financial advice. Actual rate, fees, and payment are set by your lender and vary.

Estimates only. Not financial advice. Your actual rate, fees, and payment are set by your lender and will vary.

How to read your result

The monthly payment assumes you pay the drawn amount back in equal installments over the term you picked — same as a fixed installment loan. The total interest is everything you’d pay on top of the principal over that term, and total repaid is the two added together.

Three quick reality checks:

  • A longer term lowers the monthly payment but raises total interest. A shorter term does the reverse. Slide the term and watch both numbers move.
  • The APR you enter drives everything. Garbage in, garbage out — use the rate your lender actually quoted, not a number you hope to get.
  • This is a clean, textbook amortization. A real line of credit rarely behaves this cleanly (next section).

Why a real line of credit differs

A business line of credit is revolving, not a one-shot loan, so the textbook math is a starting point, not a promise:

  • Interest is charged only on what you draw. Leave $40,000 of a $100,000 line untouched and you don’t pay interest on it. The calculator assumes you’re repaying a specific drawn amount.
  • Rates are often variable. Many lines are tied to a benchmark (like the prime rate) plus a margin, so your rate — and your payment — can move over the life of the line. A fixed-payment estimate won’t capture that. See factor rate vs. APR for how lenders quote cost, and how a merchant cash advance dresses up its cost differently.
  • Draw fees and maintenance fees are common. Some lenders charge a flat fee every time you pull funds, plus monthly or annual maintenance fees. Those aren’t in the amortization math. We break the usual ones down in average rates and fees.
  • Draw-period vs. repayment-period structures vary. Some lines let you pay interest-only while the line is open, then amortize the balance later. That’s why we show the interest-only read-out.

For the full mechanics of how draws, limits, and repayment actually work, read how a business line of credit works.

What you need to qualify for that limit

Bigger limits come with a higher bar. As a rough rule of thumb, lenders weigh revenue, time in business, and credit profile against the amount you want — a $25,000 line is a very different underwrite than a $250,000 one. We don’t promise a number here, and neither should any lender before they’ve seen your file.

Run the calculator at the limit you’re targeting, then check those two pages to see whether that limit is realistic for your business before you apply.

This calculator is part of our guide to business line of credit costs.

Compare real offers

Once you know roughly what a payment looks like, the next move is to see actual rates from real lenders — that’s the only way to replace the placeholder APR with a real one. We point readers to our roundup of vetted marketplaces and direct lenders: compare offers side by side instead of applying one at a time.

Compare business line of credit options →

Comparing offers typically uses a soft credit check that doesn’t affect your score; if you accept an offer, the lender may run a hard pull at underwriting. No offer is guaranteed, and terms depend on your business and the lender. Affiliate link.

Use the offers you get to re-run the numbers above.

Frequently asked questions

What is the monthly payment on a $50,000 line of credit?

There’s no single answer, because it depends entirely on your APR and repayment term — and a true line of credit charges interest only on what you draw. To estimate it for a term repayment, use the amortization formula M = P × r ÷ (1 − (1 + r)^(−n)), where P is the amount drawn ($50,000), r is your monthly rate (APR ÷ 12), and n is the term in months. Illustrative example only: at an APR of 15% over 24 months, r = 0.0125 and M ≈ $2,424/month. That 15% is a placeholder, not a quoted rate — enter the APR your lender gave you in the calculator above to get your own estimate.

What is the payment on a $100,000 line of credit?

Same formula, with P = $100,000: M = P × r ÷ (1 − (1 + r)^(−n)). Illustrative example only: at an APR of 12% over 36 months, r = 0.01 and M ≈ $3,321/month. If you’re using the line as revolving credit and paying interest only on your balance, a rough monthly interest cost is P × r — about $1,000/month at 12% on the full $100,000, before any fees, with principal still owed. These figures are estimates using example rates, not quotes. Enter your own APR and term in the calculator for your numbers.

What is the monthly payment on a $25,000 loan?

For a fixed-term loan of $25,000, use the same amortization formula with P = $25,000. Illustrative example only: at an APR of 10% over 12 months, r ≈ 0.00833 and M ≈ $2,199/month, for roughly $1,387 in total interest. The 10% is an example for the math, not a rate we’re offering or quoting — plug in the APR and term you were actually quoted to estimate your real payment.


By Marcus Delaney, former commercial loan officer. BizBee is informational and independent. We are not a lender and do not broker loans. These are estimates only — not financial advice. Some links are affiliate links — see How We Make Money.