Loan-to-Cost Ratio Calculator
Compute the loan-to-cost (LTC) ratio for a construction or value-add loan from the loan amount and the total project cos...
Compute the loan-to-cost (LTC) ratio for a construction or value-add loan from the loan amount and the total project cos...
Convert between common density units including kilograms per cubic metre, grams per cubic centimetre, and pounds per cub...
Compute a firm's weighted average cost of capital (WACC) from the market values of equity and debt, the cost of equity,...
Compute the volume of round, square, and rectangular cake pans (assuming a 2-inch depth) and figure out how much batter...
Convert between common acceleration units: metres per second squared, standard gravity (g), feet per second squared, cen...
Compute net working capital — short-term liquidity in absolute dollars: NWC = current assets − current liabilities. Posi...
Convert an hourly wage into an annual, monthly, or weekly salary — and vice versa.
Compute the number of months it takes for the monthly savings from refinancing into a lower rate to recoup the upfront c...
Compute your new monthly mortgage payment after a one-time lump-sum principal reduction (a "recast"). Reports the old pa...
Calculates gravitational field strength g(h) = GM / (R+h)² at an altitude h above Earth's surface, where GM = 3.986×10¹⁴...
Compute the implied forward rate between two future periods from the corresponding zero-coupon spot rates: F = ((1 + s₂)...
Determine how long it takes for the monthly savings from buying mortgage discount points to outweigh their up-front cost...
Needs, wants, and savings at 50/30/20 is a starting point — not a rulebook. Here is how to adapt it when your life doesn't fit neatly into t...
A calm, jargon-free walkthrough of what actually drives your monthly mortgage payment — and how to make the number smaller.
We pulled usage data across our 30 most-visited calculators to understand how readers actually use consumer finance tools. Findings, caveats...
The same $250 a month looks unremarkable for a decade and then suddenly dominates the chart. Here is why compounding behaves that way.