In many cases, early repayment reduces interest and removes a monthly obligation. But the decision rarely exists in isolation. The structure of the loan, the interest payments, possible repayment penalties, and the alternative uses for that cash all matter. So does something less visible: how carrying the balance affects your day to day financial decisions and sense of stability. It’s a practical decision, but it also reveals how we tend to think about debt more broadly.
Many Canadians aim to eliminate debt as quickly as possible, and the instinct to eliminate debt is understandable. But not all debt is created equal, and not all repayment decisions improve your broader financial picture. Before committing a windfall to early repayment, it is worth taking a closer look at both the numbers and the tradeoffs.
Can you pay personal loans off early?
Once you start considering early repayment, the next step is clarifying what your specific loan allows. The assumption that loans always penalize early payoff is common, but it is largely borrowed from the mortgage world, where closed-term products commonly include prepayment penalties. Personal loans are often more flexible, although not universally so.
In Canada, personal loans are typically structured as either open or closed. Open loans generally permit repayment in full at any time without penalty. Closed loans may limit how much additional principal can be paid in a year or charge a fee if the balance is discharged before the agreed term ends.
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The loan agreement will explain how additional payments are applied. This matters more than people realize. For example, if your scheduled payment is $600 per month and you decide to pay $800 instead, you will want to know how the extra $200 is treated. If it reduces principal immediately, the loan shortens and total interest declines. If it is treated as an advance on future payments, the amortization schedule may remain unchanged. The mechanics determine whether you are actually lowering the cost of borrowing.
Because interest is calculated on the outstanding balance, only payments that reduce that balance ahead of schedule will lower the total cost of borrowing.
Before proceeding with an increased payment, confirm:
Are lump sum payments permitted?
Are there annual caps?
Can you increase your regular payment without penalty?
Does early repayment trigger a fee?
How exactly are additional payments applied?
Once those terms are clear, it’s easier to evaluate the financial tradeoffs.
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Related reading: The MoneySense guide to debt management
How much interest would you actually save?
Personal loans are amortized, which means interest is concentrated earlier in the term, when the outstanding balance is highest. As that balance declines, interest becomes a smaller portion of each payment and principal repayment takes on a larger share. An extra payment made early therefore prevents more future interest than one made near the end, when much of that cost has already been absorbed.
The amount you save depends on three variables:
Remaining balance
Interest rate
Time left on the loan
For example, a borrower with $15,000 remaining at 8% interest and three years left would pay roughly $2,000 more in interest by staying on schedule. Eliminating the balance today removes most of that future cost. By contrast, a borrower with $4,000 remaining at 5% interest and 10 months left would owe a few hundred dollars in remaining interest. Paying it off early shortens the timeline, but the savings are modest.
The simplest way to assess your own position is to compare the total remaining cost of the loan with the cost of paying it off now. The difference is the interest avoided. If a prepayment penalty applies, it reduces that figure and must be included in the calculation.
There is also a secondary benefit: once the loan is gone, the required monthly payment disappears from your budget. If that amount is redirected toward saving or investing, it begins working in your favour rather than servicing debt. The overall benefit of early repayment therefore consists of two parts: the interest you avoid and the future use of the cash flow it frees up. Reducing that monthly obligation can also improve your debt-to-income ratio, which may strengthen an application for other financing, such as a mortgage.
That combined benefit is what you are measuring against other priorities.
What else could that money do?
After you have worked out how much interest you would save, the decision becomes a question of opportunity cost.




















