Flat rate vs reducing balance: why the effective rate matters
In Malaysia and many other countries, car loans and personal loans are often quoted using a flat interest rate. On paper the number looks small, for example 2.5 percent or 3 percent per year. In reality, the true cost of borrowing is much higher because interest is charged on the original principal instead of the reducing balance. That is where the Effective Interest Rate (EIR) comes in.
How flat rate loans work
With a flat rate structure, the bank calculates total interest based on the original loan amount and the full tenure. For example, if you borrow RM50,000 at 3 percent flat per year for 7 years, the flat interest is:
- Flat interest per year = RM50,000 × 3 percent = RM1,500
- Flat interest over 7 years = RM1,500 × 7 = RM10,500
- Total to repay = RM50,000 + RM10,500 = RM60,500
The monthly installment is simply the total repayment divided by the number of months. There is no reducing balance in the formula, even though your real outstanding loan does go down every month when you pay.
Reducing balance and the effective interest rate
The effective interest rate treats the loan like a standard term loan where interest each month is calculated on the remaining outstanding principal. The monthly installment remains the same, but the split between interest and principal changes through the life of the loan.
Mathematically, the EIR is the rate r that satisfies the standard present value formula for an annuity:
Present value = Monthly installment × (1 − (1 + r)−N) ÷ r
where N is the total number of months. Our converter solves this equation numerically using an iterative method to find the monthly effective rate and then annualises it for easier comparison between banks.
Why the simple 1.8 multiplier is often misleading
A common shortcut says that the effective rate is about 1.8 times the flat rate. For example, a 3 percent flat rate is roughly equal to 5.4 percent reducing balance. While this rule of thumb can give a quick sense of scale, it ignores the actual tenure and repayment structure. Longer tenures and different payment frequencies can push the EIR higher or lower than this simple multiplier suggests.
A proper calculator like this one takes your exact loan amount, rate and tenure, then computes the true effective rate based on the real cash flows.
How to use EIR when comparing bank offers
When you receive multiple loan offers, the advertised numbers may not be directly comparable. One bank might show a flat rate, another might show a reducing balance rate, and a third might package the loan with compulsory insurance or fees.
- First, convert all flat rate offers to an effective reducing rate using this tool.
- Second, add any mandatory fees or insurance to the total cost and recalculate the effective rate if possible.
- Third, compare loans using the EIR and the total repayment amount, not just the monthly installment.
The headline installment can be similar while the total interest paid over the years differs by thousands of ringgit.
Principles for safer borrowing decisions
Beyond comparing rates, a few simple principles can help you keep borrowing under control:
- A shorter tenure almost always reduces total interest, even if the monthly installment is higher.
- A slightly lower rate does not help much if you stretch the tenure too long.
- Do not borrow based only on what the bank says you can afford. Test different scenarios using this calculator.
- Pay attention to early settlement clauses and penalties if you plan to clear the loan earlier than scheduled.
Treat loans as a tool rather than free money. Understanding the real effective rate is a key part of that mindset.
Limitations of this calculator
This tool assumes a simple structure: fixed equal monthly installments, no additional fees, no compounding inside each month and no changes to the repayment schedule. Real bank products may include handling fees, legal costs, insurance premiums, variable rates or flexible redraw features. Those extras will change the true EIR.
Use this calculator as a starting point to ask better questions during your loan discussion. Ask the banker to show you the full amortisation schedule and the total interest you will pay over the full tenure, then check that the numbers align with your own calculations.