Much has been said about Bank Negara’s new guidelines regarding loan tenures. The banking authority released regulations limiting tenures for home loans and personal loans in a bid to reduce escalating debt rates. The move had its supporters and detractors but as we plan to show you, in personal loans, longer is definitely not better.
According to the guidelines, the maximum number of years for which a personal loan can be taken is 10 years. The ruling will affect mostly non-commercial banks as for regular commercial banks tenures typically don’t exceed 8 years. Nonetheless, taking out a loan for even 7 years could cause a serious dent in your wallet.
Unlike home loans or credit card balances, personal loan interest rates are calculated every year based on the amount you borrowed and not the amount you have remaining to repay. This means that even when your balance hits its final monthly payment of, say, RM400, you are still paying interest on the RM10,000 you borrowed.
For credit cards and home loans, even though your interest rate is a fixed 18% or 4% per annum; this percentage is calculated on the balance you have remaining at the end of the month and NOT the amount you started out with. And this can make a big difference. If you have an RM10,000 balance on your credit card and RM10,000 in personal loans, after paying a minimum of RM500 for 12 months (equivalent to approximately RM6000), the interest you pay on the 7th month is RM60 on the credit card and RM75 on the personal loan. Despite the interest on a credit card being 18%, and the personal loan being 9%; you still pay more on the personal loan because of the method of calculation.
Whilst it seems almost obvious that paying a loan over a longer period of time will cost you more money; the damage is especially pronounced when you’re continually paying for a principal amount you no longer carry with your bank.
We’ve done the math for you. Using the same example above, a loan of RM10,000 on a 9% interest rate, you can expect to pay the following amounts in interest:
For those who truly need the money and are unable to pay more than the very minimum amount, it is understandable to opt for a long tenure but if you are able to repay just a little bit more, the interest savings would make the inconvenience worthwhile.
A personal loan is no doubt an expensive banking product but its usefulness in times of emergencies is undoubted. A credit card will not always be able to patch a financial gap the way cold cash can. The inconvenient truth remains, however, that we do pay dearly for such assistance.
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