Australian Interest-Only Loan Calculator

Compare interest-only repayments during the IO period with the higher P&I payments that follow. See total interest cost and the payment jump. AUD.

$
% p.a.
% p.a.
Interest-Only Payment
A$4,063/mo
For 5 years, then A$4,924/mo P&I for 25 years
IO Monthly Payment
A$4,063
P&I Payment After IO
A$4,924
Total IO Interest Paid
A$243,750
Total P&I Interest Paid
A$727,310
Total Interest
A$971,060
vs P&I from Start
+A$67,393 extra
Payment jump alert: When the IO period ends, your monthly payment increases from A$4,063 to A$4,924 — a jump of A$862/month. Ensure your budget can accommodate this increase.

How Interest-Only Loans Work in Australia

During the interest-only period, your repayments cover only the interest — your loan balance does not reduce. After the IO period expires, you switch to principal and interest repayments, which are higher because you have the same original debt but fewer years to repay it.

IO rates in Australia are typically 0.2–0.5% higher than P&I rates for the same loan. APRA guidelines generally limit IO periods to 5 years for owner-occupiers and 10 years for investment loans.

The Formula

IO Monthly Payment = Loan Amount × Annual Rate / 12

After IO Period:
P&I Payment = Loan × [r(1+r)^n] / [(1+r)^n - 1]
Where n = remaining years × 12
(Same principal, fewer months — higher payment)

Extra Cost vs P&I from Start:
= Total IO Interest - Interest saved from lower early payments

Example: Investment Property in Brisbane

$800,000 Investment Loan — 5-Year IO

Loan Amount$800,000
IO Rate / IO Period6.50% / 5 years
P&I Rate / P&I Period6.20% / 25 years
IO Monthly Payment (yr 1-5)$4,333
P&I Monthly Payment (yr 6-30)$5,298
Payment jump at year 6+$965/month
Total IO Interest Paid$260,000
Extra cost vs P&I from start~$65,000

The investor benefits from $965/month lower repayments during the IO period for tax deduction purposes and cash flow management. However, they pay ~$65,000 more in total interest over the life of the loan.

Frequently Asked Questions

IO loans suit property investors who want to maximise tax deductions (all IO payments are deductible as interest for investment properties) and optimise cash flow. Also used by owner-occupiers with variable income (commission-based) who can make lump-sum payments in good years. Rarely recommended for long-term owner-occupiers due to higher total cost and no equity building.
Possibly — but you'll need to apply for a new IO period and the lender will reassess your situation. APRA places limits: 5 years for owner-occupiers, 10 years for investors. If your IO period expires and you can't afford the higher P&I repayments, refinancing to a new loan with a new IO period is one option, but this resets costs.
Yes. For investment properties, 100% of interest payments are tax deductible (subject to the property generating rental income). This is why many investors prefer IO — they preserve the full deductible interest amount. With P&I, as the loan reduces, the deductible interest also decreases over time.

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