R700,000 Car Loan Monthly Payment (South Africa 2026)
Monthly repayments, total interest, and full cost breakdown for a R700,000 car loan in South Africa at 13.75% over 6 years.
Monthly Repayment
R700,000 car loan ยท 13.75% interest ยท 6 year term ยท South Africa 2026
Loan Amount
R700,000
Interest Rate
13.75% p.a.
Total Interest
R331,794
Total Repaid
R1,031,794
What Does a R700,000 Car Loan Cost in South Africa?
At 13.75% over 6 years, a R700,000 car loan costs R14,330.48 per month and a total of R1,031,794 โ with R331,794 going to interest. That interest represents 47% of the original loan amount.
South African car finance is typically priced at prime plus 2โ4 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 30โ35% of your gross income. That means a R14,330.48 car instalment calls for a gross income of at least R47,768 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 R105,000 on a R700,000 car reduces your financed amount to R595,000. Your monthly instalment drops from R14,330.48 to R12,180.91 โ and you save approximately R154,769 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 15โ25% of their value in the first year. Without a deposit, you're likely underwater on the loan for the first 18โ24 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.