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R150,000 Car Loan Monthly Payment (South Africa 2026)

Monthly repayments, total interest, and full cost breakdown for a R150,000 car loan in South Africa at 13.75% over 6 years.

Monthly Repayment

R3,070.82

R150,000 car loan ยท 13.75% interest ยท 6 year term ยท South Africa 2026

Loan Amount

R150,000

Interest Rate

13.75% p.a.

Total Interest

R71,099

Total Repaid

R221,099

Full Repayment Breakdown

DetailAmount
Loan PrincipalR150,000
Annual Interest Rate13.75%
Loan Term6 years (72 months)
Monthly RepaymentR3,070.82
Total Interest PaidR71,099
Total Amount RepaidR221,099

Compare Repayments by Loan Term

TermMonthlyTotal InterestTotal Repaid
3 yrs (36 mo)R5,108.45R33,904R183,904
4 yrs (48 mo)R4,080.19R45,849R195,849
5 yrs (60 mo)R3,470.83R58,250R208,250
6 yrs (72 mo)R3,070.82R71,099R221,099
7 yrs (84 mo)R2,790.33R84,387R234,387

What Does a R150,000 Car Loan Cost in South Africa?

At 13.75% over 6 years, a R150,000 car loan costs R3,070.82 per month and a total of R221,099 โ€” with R71,099 going to interest. That interest represents 47% of the original loan amount.

South African car finance is typically priced at prime plus 2โ€“4 percentage points. With the prime rate at 10.25% in 2026, most buyers are paying between 12.25% and 14.25%. A strong credit score (650+), a deposit of 10% or more, and applying through your own bank rather than dealer finance all help you secure a lower rate โ€” which directly reduces both your monthly instalment and total cost.

To keep your finances healthy, your total monthly debt repayments (car, bond, personal loans) should ideally not exceed 30โ€“35% of your gross income. That means a R3,070.82 car instalment calls for a gross income of at least R10,236 per month if it's your only debt commitment.

Use our Loan Affordability Calculator to stress-test this repayment against your full income and expense picture.

Disclaimer: Calculations use a fixed rate of 13.75% and exclude initiation fees, monthly admin fees, and insurance. Actual repayments will vary. Always confirm with your lender.

The Deposit Advantage: How It Changes Your Repayment

A 15% deposit of R22,500 on a R150,000 car reduces your financed amount to R127,500. Your monthly instalment drops from R3,070.82 to R2,610.19 โ€” and you save approximately R33,165 in total interest over the life of the loan. That saving alone can cover a year of fuel costs.

Beyond the financial saving, a deposit also protects against negative equity โ€” the situation where you owe more than the car is worth. Most new vehicles lose 15โ€“25% of their value in the first year. Without a deposit, you're likely underwater on the loan for the first 18โ€“24 months, which creates a gap between what insurance pays out (market value) and what you owe the bank if the car is written off.

If you're in a position to save before buying, even a 10% deposit makes a meaningful difference to both your monthly cash flow and long-term cost. Use the Savings Goal Calculator to plan how long it will take to save your target deposit amount.

Frequently Asked Questions

A R150,000 car loan in South Africa at 13.75% interest over 6 years costs R3,070.82 per month. Total repayment is R221,099, meaning you pay R71,099 in interest over the loan term.
With the prime rate at 10.25% in 2026, most SA car loans are priced between 12.25% and 14.25%. Your rate depends on your credit score, deposit size, and whether the car is new or used. Getting pre-approval from your bank before visiting a dealer gives you a benchmark rate to negotiate from.
Most SA banks prefer a 10-20% deposit. A 15% deposit of R22,500 reduces your loan to R127,500, lowering your monthly payment and saving approximately R33,165 in interest over the full term. Some lenders offer 100% financing but at a higher rate.
Shorter is cheaper overall. On R150,000 at 13.75%, a 5-year term costs R3,470.83 per month with R58,250 total interest. A 7-year term costs R2,790.33 per month but total interest rises to R84,387. Choose the shortest term your budget comfortably supports.
Most South African vehicle finance agreements are linked to the prime rate. If the SARB cuts rates, your instalment drops. If rates rise, it increases. Some lenders offer fixed-rate options which protect against increases but won't benefit from cuts. Always confirm whether your rate is variable or fixed before signing.
Yes. The National Credit Act allows early settlement of any credit agreement at any time. You pay the outstanding capital plus interest accrued to the settlement date. Early settlement saves all remaining interest from that date forward. Request a settlement quote from your lender - it takes 1-2 business days and costs nothing to get.

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