How to calculate settlement figure

How to calculate settlement figure

Author
Discussion

AndyADH

135 posts

226 months

Thursday 28th February 2008
quotequote all
Just as a quick calculation if you have been paying for exactly 4 years then you would now owe 17,455.72.

That is unless I made a mistake, which is known to happen now and again.

I would get a second opinion though and also exactly how many months have you been paying? It seems a lot but I guess because the majority you pay for the first few years is interest they really get your money out of you.

Hope this helps

timskipper

1,297 posts

267 months

Thursday 28th February 2008
quotequote all
ScuttleRX said:
25k over 10 years (£311 a month)
:shocked: that's some interest rate!

ETA: There's a built in MS Excel function for working this out I believe - I'll see if I can find it later if nobody else has come up with the answer.

Edited by timskipper on Thursday 28th February 16:22

mcflurry

9,101 posts

254 months

Thursday 28th February 2008
quotequote all
Assuming its interest rate is set at 8.5% and the loan started on the 1/1/04 I make it around £17k

Disclaimer - This was done on a piece of paper, so may not be 100% accurate etc etc




Egbert Nobacon

2,835 posts

244 months

Thursday 28th February 2008
quotequote all
Google the "Rule of 78"

mogul

14,988 posts

251 months

Thursday 28th February 2008
quotequote all
Egbert Nobacon said:
Google the "Rule of 78"
yes

AndyADH

135 posts

226 months

Thursday 28th February 2008
quotequote all
mcflurry said:
Assuming its interest rate is set at 8.5% and the loan started on the 1/1/04 I make it around £17k

Disclaimer - This was done on a piece of paper, so may not be 100% accurate etc etc
Good someone gets the same as me. I was in a rush this morning when I calculated it.

I based it on 8.578% interest.

So if you have paid for
4 years then you will still owe. 17,455.72
4.5 years then you will still owe. 16,318.18
5 years then you will still owe. 15,130.98

Hope this helps

AndyADH

135 posts

226 months

Friday 29th February 2008
quotequote all
I was cheating and pluging the numbers into a calculator :-)

Its easier than working it out manually and quicker.

Alternatively Excel works well

Piglet

6,250 posts

256 months

Friday 29th February 2008
quotequote all
AndyADH said:
Alternatively Excel works well
Can you explain how to do this in Excel? Is there a specific formula?

I'm always puzzed by settlement figures and have tried to understand the whole 78's thing but my absolute stupidity with numbers makes it difficult.

Cheers





mogul

14,988 posts

251 months

Friday 29th February 2008
quotequote all
Piglet said:
AndyADH said:
Alternatively Excel works well
Can you explain how to do this in Excel? Is there a specific formula?

I'm always puzzed by settlement figures and have tried to understand the whole 78's thing but my absolute stupidity with numbers makes it difficult.

Cheers
You're not stupid, the rule of 78 was designed to make life as difficult as it can be to calculate a settlement figure! wink

timskipper

1,297 posts

267 months

Friday 29th February 2008
quotequote all
I think the formula you want in Excel is PPMT()

smartie

2,604 posts

274 months

Friday 29th February 2008
quotequote all
I thought loans under £25K were settled on a 2 months interest basis rather than rule of 78?

mcflurry

9,101 posts

254 months

Friday 29th February 2008
quotequote all
smartie said:
I thought loans under £25K were settled on a 2 months interest basis rather than rule of 78?
AFAIK it only applies to new loans taken out in the last year or so