What our calculators are designed to do
Budget Beyond calculators are designed to help users estimate possible financial scenarios in a simple, plain-English way.
For example, the Debt Payoff Calculator estimates how long it may take to pay off a balance, how much interest may be paid, and how extra monthly payments may change the repayment timeline.
These tools are intended to help users better understand their numbers before reading guides, comparing options, or taking next steps.
What calculator results are based on
Calculator results are based on the information entered by the user and the formulas used by the relevant calculator.
- Debt balance or starting amount
- Annual interest rate or estimated rate
- Monthly payment amount
- Optional extra payment amount
- Basic timing assumptions, such as monthly payment cycles
If the inputs are inaccurate or incomplete, the result may also be inaccurate or incomplete.
Debt Payoff Calculator assumptions
The Debt Payoff Calculator uses a simplified monthly interest model.
- The annual interest rate is divided by 12 to estimate monthly interest.
- Monthly interest is added to the current balance.
- The monthly payment is applied after interest is added.
- The process repeats until the estimated balance reaches zero.
- If an extra payment is entered, it is added to the regular monthly payment.
Important: This calculator does not replace a lender statement, repayment schedule, credit agreement, or professional financial advice.
What may not be included
Real-world financial outcomes can be affected by details that a simple calculator may not include.
- Late fees or missed payment fees
- Balance transfer fees
- Promotional interest rates
- Variable interest rates
- Changing minimum payments
- Account-specific lender rules
- Payment timing differences
- Taxes, insurance, or other personal costs
- Future borrowing or new debt
This is why calculator results should be treated as estimates, not exact predictions.
How guides and explanations are created
Budget Beyond guides are written to support users who want simple financial explanations without unnecessary complexity.
Our content aims to explain common money decisions, calculator results, and possible next steps in beginner-friendly language.
We aim to separate educational information from partner recommendations as clearly as possible. If a page includes partner links, that relationship should not affect calculator formulas or outputs.
How often methodology may change
Budget Beyond may update calculator formulas, assumptions, examples, page explanations, or methodology notes over time.
Updates may happen when we improve a calculator, find an error, add a new tool, clarify wording, or improve the user experience.
When a page is updated, the visible “last updated” date may be changed to reflect the latest meaningful review.
What users should do before making decisions
Calculator results can be a useful starting point, but users should check real product terms before making decisions.
- Review actual lender or provider terms
- Check fees, rates, eligibility, and risks
- Compare multiple options where appropriate
- Consider speaking with a qualified professional if unsure
- Do not rely only on a calculator estimate for major financial decisions
Questions or corrections
If you notice a possible calculation issue, unclear explanation, broken link, or outdated page, you can contact Budget Beyond through the Contact page.
We may review user feedback to improve calculators, guides, and methodology notes.