Business Loan Calculator
بزنس لون کیلکولیٹرCalculate your monthly installment, total interest, and the minimum monthly revenue your business needs to comfortably service the loan.
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ماہانہ مطلوبہ آمدنی
A business loan installment uses the same reducing-balance formula as any other amortized loan, but the number that actually matters to a business owner isn't the installment in isolation — it's whether the business generates enough revenue to cover that installment comfortably, on top of regular operating costs.
The Break-Even Monthly Revenue figure goes a step further than a standard EMI calculator. It answers a more useful question: "How much do I need to sell this month, just to cover this loan installment?" It divides your installment by your expected net profit margin — so if your installment is Rs. 40,000 and your business runs on a 20% net margin, you'd need roughly Rs. 200,000 in revenue that month purely to generate enough profit to cover the loan payment, before anything is left over for you. This reframes the loan from an abstract monthly number into a concrete sales target your business needs to hit.
یہ کیلکولیٹر صرف ماہانہ قسط نہیں بتاتا، بلکہ یہ بھی بتاتا ہے کہ آپ کے کاروبار کو قسط پوری کرنے کے لیے ماہانہ کم از کم کتنی آمدنی درکار ہوگی — آپ کے منافع کے تناسب کی بنیاد پر۔Not every business loan looks the same. Here's how the major categories typically differ in structure — use these as a starting point, then enter your lender's actual quoted terms into the calculator above.
| Loan Type | Typical Rate | Typical Tenure |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial Bank Business Loan | 16% – 24% | 3 – 7 Years |
| SME Working Capital Facility | 14% – 20% | 1 – 3 Years |
| Govt. Qarz-e-Hasna (e.g. Asaan Karobar Finance) | 0% (Markup-Free) | 3 – 5 Years |
| Leasing / Equipment Finance | 15% – 22% | 3 – 5 Years |
A markup-free Qarz-e-Hasna loan, like the structure used in Punjab's Asaan Karobar Finance Scheme, fundamentally changes the math: set the interest rate field above to 0 and your installment becomes simply the principal divided evenly across your tenure, with zero interest cost — only the processing fee (if any) adds to your total cost.
The underlying reducing-balance formula is identical for both. What typically differs is the rate, tenure, and structure — business loans are often shorter (3-7 years) than home loans, may require collateral or a business plan, and in Pakistan can sometimes be accessed at 0% markup through government schemes designed specifically for entrepreneurs.
It's the minimum monthly revenue your business needs to generate, after accounting for your profit margin, to cover the loan installment without straining cash flow. Many business owners check whether they can afford the installment in isolation, but never translate that into "how much do I actually need to sell this month" — which is the number that matters when you're forecasting.
Yes. Even at 0% interest, you still need to know your fixed monthly installment and whether your expected business revenue can comfortably cover it. Set the interest rate field to 0 to model a scheme like Asaan Karobar Finance directly, and you'll still see a meaningful processing fee and break-even revenue figure worth planning around.
Use your net profit margin — the percentage of revenue left after all operating costs, not just cost of goods sold. Gross margin overstates how much "breathing room" you actually have, since it ignores rent, salaries, and utilities. Net margin gives a more realistic break-even revenue figure.