Reference

The loan glossary.

Plain-English definitions for every term you're likely to encounter when taking out a loan or mortgage. No jargon left unexplained.

A

Amortisation

The process of paying off a loan through regular instalments over a set period. Each payment covers both interest and a portion of the principal. Early payments are weighted heavily toward interest; later payments pay down more principal.

Example: On a 30-year mortgage, you might pay $1,200/month. In year one, $900 of that goes to interest and $300 to principal. By year 25, it flips — most of each payment reduces what you owe.

APR — Annual Percentage Rate

The true yearly cost of a loan, expressed as a percentage. APR includes not just the interest rate but also fees such as origination charges, making it more useful than the headline rate for comparing loan offers.

Example: A loan advertised at 6% interest but with $2,000 in fees might have an APR of 6.8%. Always compare APRs, not just rates.

APY — Annual Percentage Yield

Similar to APR but accounts for the effect of compounding interest. More commonly used for savings accounts than loans. A higher APY on savings is good; a higher APR on a loan is bad.

Arrears

When a borrower falls behind on scheduled loan payments. Being in arrears can trigger penalty fees, damage your credit score, and in serious cases lead to default proceedings.

B

Balloon payment

A large lump-sum payment due at the end of a loan term. Some loans are structured with low monthly payments but a balloon payment at the end — common in certain car finance (PCP) and commercial loan agreements.

Base rate

The benchmark interest rate set by a central bank (e.g. the Federal Reserve in the US, the Bank of England in the UK). Lenders use the base rate as a floor when pricing their own loan products. When the base rate rises, most variable-rate loans become more expensive.

Bridging loan

A short-term loan used to cover a gap — most commonly in property transactions where you need to buy a new home before selling your existing one. Higher interest rates than standard mortgages; intended to be repaid within months, not years.

C

Capital (or Principal)

The original sum of money borrowed, before any interest is added. When you make loan repayments, part goes to interest and part reduces the capital balance.

Collateral

An asset pledged as security for a loan. If you default, the lender can seize the collateral to recover their money. Your home is collateral on a mortgage; your car on a car loan.

Compound interest

Interest calculated on both the original principal and the accumulated interest from previous periods. It grows your debt faster than simple interest. Most mortgages and loans use compound interest — which is why paying extra early makes such a large difference over time.

Example: $10,000 at 5% simple interest = $500 interest/year. At 5% compound, after 10 years you owe $16,289 — not $15,000.

Credit score

A numerical rating (typically 300–850 in the US) that reflects how reliably you repay debt. Lenders use it to decide whether to approve a loan and at what rate. A higher score generally means a lower interest rate on offer.

D

Debt consolidation

Taking out a single new loan to pay off multiple existing debts. The goal is usually to reduce the overall interest rate, simplify payments, or lower the monthly outgoing. Can save money if the new rate is lower — but can cost more if the term is extended significantly.

Debt-to-income ratio (DTI)

Your total monthly debt payments divided by your gross monthly income, expressed as a percentage. Lenders use DTI to assess affordability. A DTI above 43% will disqualify many applicants for a mortgage.

Example: $2,000/month in debt payments on a $5,000/month income = 40% DTI.

Default

Failure to meet the legal obligations of a loan — usually by missing a set number of payments. Defaulting can result in the lender taking legal action, repossessing collateral, and a serious long-term impact on your credit history.

Deposit (down payment)

The upfront cash contribution a borrower makes toward a purchase. A larger deposit means a smaller loan and usually a lower interest rate. On a mortgage, a 20% deposit typically avoids private mortgage insurance (PMI).

E

Early repayment charge (ERC)

A fee charged by some lenders if you pay off a loan — or make overpayments above a set threshold — before the agreed end date. Common on fixed-rate mortgages during the initial deal period. Always check for ERCs before overpaying.

Equity

The portion of an asset you own outright — the market value minus what you still owe. Home equity grows as you pay down your mortgage and as property values rise. You can borrow against equity via a home equity loan or line of credit.

F

Fixed-rate loan

A loan where the interest rate stays the same for the entire term (or a set initial period). Your monthly payment is predictable, which makes budgeting easier — but you won't benefit if rates fall.

Forbearance

A temporary agreement with a lender to pause or reduce loan payments during financial hardship. Interest typically continues to accrue. Not the same as forgiveness — the payments are deferred, not cancelled.

I

Interest

The cost of borrowing money, calculated as a percentage of the outstanding balance. It's how lenders make money. The higher the rate and the longer the term, the more interest you pay in total.

Interest-only mortgage

A mortgage where monthly payments cover only the interest, not the capital. Your balance stays the same throughout the term — you must repay the full original amount at the end (usually by selling the property or from savings).

L

LTV — Loan-to-value ratio

The size of your loan expressed as a percentage of the property's value. A $200,000 mortgage on a $250,000 home = 80% LTV. Lower LTV generally means better rates and fewer restrictions from lenders.

M

Mortgage

A loan secured against a property. If you fail to repay it, the lender can repossess and sell the property to recover the debt. Mortgages typically run 15–30 years and are the largest financial commitment most people make.

Monthly payment

The fixed amount paid to a lender each month, comprising interest and principal repayment (on a repayment mortgage). Calculated using the loan amount, interest rate, and term length.

N

Negative equity

When the outstanding mortgage balance is higher than the current market value of the property. This can happen after a fall in property prices. Being in negative equity makes it difficult to sell or remortgage.

O

Origination fee

A one-off fee charged by a lender to process and set up a new loan. Usually expressed as a percentage of the loan amount (e.g. 1%). Included in the APR calculation — watch for it when comparing offers.

Overpayment

Paying more than the required monthly amount. Overpayments reduce your outstanding balance faster, cutting the total interest paid and shortening the loan term. Even small regular overpayments can save thousands over the life of a mortgage.

Example: Overpaying by $200/month on a $280,000 30-year mortgage at 6.8% could save over $60,000 in interest and cut 6 years off the term.
P

Principal

The original amount borrowed, excluding interest. When you repay a loan, each payment reduces the principal balance (as well as covering interest). The faster you reduce the principal, the less interest you pay overall.

PMI — Private mortgage insurance

Insurance required by US lenders when the down payment is less than 20% of the home's value. It protects the lender (not you) if you default. PMI typically costs 0.5–1.5% of the loan amount per year and can be removed once you reach 20% equity.

R

Refinancing

Replacing an existing loan with a new one — usually to get a lower interest rate, reduce monthly payments, or change the loan term. Can save significant money but comes with closing costs and may reset your amortisation clock.

Repayment mortgage

The standard type of mortgage where each monthly payment covers both interest and a portion of the capital. By the end of the term, you've paid off everything. Contrasts with an interest-only mortgage, where the capital remains at the end.

S

Secured loan

A loan backed by an asset (collateral). If you default, the lender can take the asset. Mortgages and car loans are secured. Because the lender has protection, secured loans typically carry lower interest rates than unsecured ones.

Simple interest

Interest calculated only on the original principal, not on accumulated interest. Less common for long-term loans than compound interest. $10,000 at 5% simple interest = $500 per year, every year, regardless of what has been repaid.

T

Term

The length of time over which a loan is repaid. Longer terms mean lower monthly payments but more total interest paid. Shorter terms mean higher monthly payments but less overall cost. A 15-year mortgage always costs less in total than a 30-year mortgage at the same rate.

Total cost of credit

The full amount you'll pay over the life of a loan, including all interest and fees. This is the figure that really matters — not just the monthly payment. Two loans with the same monthly payment can have very different total costs if the terms differ.

U

Underwriting

The process by which a lender assesses the risk of offering a loan. Includes checking credit history, income, employment, debts, and the value of any collateral. The underwriting decision determines whether you're approved and at what rate.

Unsecured loan

A loan not backed by any collateral. Personal loans and credit cards are typically unsecured. Because the lender takes on more risk, rates are higher than for secured loans. If you default, the lender must pursue legal action rather than repossessing an asset.