Personal Loan Repayment Terms: 1 to 7 Years Explained
The repayment term you choose has a bigger impact on your total loan cost than almost any other single decision β bigger than a 1% APR difference at most loan amounts. A $15,000 loan at the same interest rate costs $1,908 over 3 years and $4,488 over 7 years β that's $2,580 more in interest simply from choosing a longer term. This guide explains every standard repayment term, the monthly payment and total interest cost for each, and the framework for choosing the term that minimises your total cost without straining your budget.
What repayment terms are available on a personal loan? Standard personal loan terms range from 12 months to 84 months (1β7 years), in increments of 12 months. The most common terms are 24, 36, and 60 months. Shorter terms mean higher monthly payments but significantly less total interest paid. Longer terms lower the monthly payment but dramatically increase total interest cost β on a $10,000 loan at 11.65% APR, a 3-year term costs $1,908 in interest while a 7-year term costs $4,488 β a $2,580 difference. The correct framework: choose the shortest term your monthly budget can comfortably sustain. For how term length interacts with APR, see: Personal Loan APR Explained: What It Really Means (Article 13).
All Repayment Terms: Monthly Payment and Total Cost
The table below shows the monthly payment and total interest cost for every standard personal loan term, calculated at the Federal Reserve G.19 Q1 2026 national average APR of 11.65%. All figures use a $10,000 loan amount for direct comparison β scale proportionally for other amounts.
| Term | Months | Monthly Payment | Total Paid | Total Interest | Extra vs. 12 Mo |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Year | 12 | $886 | $10,632 | $632 | β |
| 2 Years | 24 | $468 | $11,232 | $1,232 | +$600 |
| 3 Years | 36 | $330 | $11,880 | $1,880 | +$1,248 |
| 4 Years | 48 | $261 | $12,528 | $2,528 | +$1,896 |
| 5 Years | 60 | $221 | $13,260 | $3,260 | +$2,628 |
| 6 Years | 72 | $196 | $14,112 | $4,112 | +$3,480 |
| 7 Years | 84 | $179 | $15,036 | $5,036 | +$4,404 |
The 7-year term lowers your monthly payment from $886 (1 year) to $179 β a reduction of $707/month. That sounds attractive. But over the 84 months, you pay $5,036 in interest β more than half the original loan amount β for borrowing $10,000. The 3-year term, by contrast, costs $1,880 in interest with a $330/month payment. The question is not "can I afford the lower payment?" β it is "can I afford the shorter term?" In almost all cases, choosing the shortest affordable term is the financially correct decision.
Term-by-Term Breakdown: Pros, Cons, and Best For
The Interest Cost Visualised
The relationship between term and total interest is not linear β it accelerates as terms lengthen. The first 12 months of extension (from 12 to 24 months) adds $600 in interest. The last 12 months (from 72 to 84 months) adds $924. Each additional year of term costs more in absolute interest than the year before, making long-term extensions progressively more expensive for the payment relief they provide.
The 3-year term is the most common personal loan term for a reason: it produces a meaningful reduction in monthly payment compared to 1β2 year terms (from $886 at 12 months to $330 at 36 months β a $556/month reduction), while keeping total interest cost at a relatively modest $1,880. The next step up to 5 years saves only $109/month vs. the 3-year term ($330 β $221) while adding $1,380 in total interest. The payment saving diminishes rapidly beyond 36 months, while interest cost continues rising steeply β this asymmetry makes the 3-year term the natural selection for most borrowers at most loan amounts.
How to Choose the Right Term for Your Situation
The correct term is the shortest term where the monthly payment doesn't exceed approximately 15%β20% of your monthly net income β and where the payment is genuinely comfortable, not technically possible but stressful. Here is the framework:
| Your Monthly Net Income | Recommended Term | Monthly Payment | % of Income | Total Interest |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $7,000+ | 24 months | $468 | ~6.7% | $1,232 |
| $4,500β$7,000 | 36 months | $330 | ~5%β7% | $1,880 |
| $3,000β$4,500 | 48 months | $261 | ~6%β9% | $2,528 |
| $2,000β$3,000 | 60 months | $221 | ~7%β11% | $3,260 |
| Below $2,000 | Reconsider borrowing | Any term may strain DTI | DTI concern | Consider smaller amount |
Scale for Different Loan Amounts
All figures above use $10,000 as the base. For other amounts, multiply payments and interest by the ratio: a $20,000 loan doubles all figures; a $7,500 loan produces 75% of the figures shown. For the complete amortization mechanics showing how each payment splits between principal and interest, see: How Does a Personal Loan Work? Step-by-Step for Beginners (Article 03). For how term interacts with APR in the total comparison, see: Personal Loan APR Explained: What It Really Means (Article 13).
If you're uncertain about cash flow flexibility, here is the optimal strategy: choose a term one step longer than your target (e.g., 48 months instead of 36 months) to secure a lower mandatory payment. Then make voluntary extra payments each month to match or exceed the payment you'd have on the shorter term. If your finances ever tighten, you can revert to the lower mandatory payment. If they don't, you'll pay off the loan close to the shorter term timeline and pay minimal extra interest. Most major lenders charge zero prepayment penalty, making this strategy genuinely free. For the full prepayment policy guide, see: Personal Loan Fees Explained: Origination, Prepayment & More (Article 11).
How Lender Availability Affects Term Choices
Not every lender offers every term. Some key constraints to know before shopping:
- Most online lenders offer 24β84 month terms across a wide range. LightStream, SoFi, and Upgrade offer up to 84 months for larger loan amounts. For small loans under $5,000, many lenders cap terms at 36 months.
- Banks typically offer 12β60 month terms and may require existing account relationships for the longer-end terms.
- Credit unions generally cap at 60 months (5 years) for unsecured personal loans, though some extend to 84 months for members with strong credit histories.
- Minimum loan amounts often apply to longer terms β a lender may only allow 84-month terms for loans above $15,000 or $20,000.
- Credit score requirements may be stricter for longer terms β lenders take on more risk with extended repayment periods and may require 700+ for 72β84 month terms.
Once your loan is originated, the term is fixed β you cannot shorten it by requesting a change with your lender. You can effectively shorten it by making extra payments (no penalty at most major lenders), but the scheduled term doesn't change. To get a different term, you would need to refinance β take out a new loan at different terms and use the proceeds to pay off the original. Whether refinancing makes sense depends on whether the new APR plus any fees is lower than your current loan's remaining cost. For the full refinancing decision framework, see: How to Apply for a Personal Loan: Step-by-Step Guide (Article 16).
Frequently Asked Questions
- [1] Federal Reserve β G.19 Consumer Credit Statistical Release, Q1 2026. National average personal loan APR 11.65%; consumer credit outstanding; installment loan term distribution data. federalreserve.gov/releases/g19/
- [2] Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) β "Personal Loans." Standard term range disclosure requirements; amortization schedule rules under TILA; total of payments calculation methodology. consumerfinance.gov
- [3] LendingTree β "Personal Loan Term Length Study, Q1 2026." Most popular term distribution (36 months most common); term availability by lender type; borrower term selection patterns by loan amount. lendingtree.com
- [4] Bankrate β "Personal Loan Rates and Terms Survey, April 2026." Term availability by lender; minimum loan amount for longer terms; credit score requirements for 72β84 month terms. bankrate.com
- [5] National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) β Q4 2025 Credit Union Data. CU personal loan term limits; share-secured loan term structures; federally chartered CU term policy. ncua.gov
- [6] myFICO β "Amounts Owed: How Installment Loan Balances Affect Your Credit Score." Installment balance ratio scoring; term length credit score impact; payment history weight 35%. myfico.com
- [7] NerdWallet β "Personal Loan Repayment Terms: How to Choose" (2026). Term tradeoff analysis; 36-month term popularity; hybrid overpayment strategy. nerdwallet.com
- [8] Experian β "How to Choose a Personal Loan Term" (2025). DTI impact by term; total interest curve analysis; short vs. long term borrower outcomes. experian.com
- [9] LightStream β "Personal Loan Terms and Rates." 24β84 month term availability; minimum loan amounts by term; credit score requirements by term tier. lightstream.com
- [10] SoFi β "Personal Loan Terms β Complete Guide." Term ranges; minimum amounts for extended terms; refinancing eligibility after origination. sofi.com