APR vs Interest Rate: What's the Difference and Which Should You Use?
Understanding the difference between APR and interest rate is crucial when comparing mortgage offers. Many borrowers focus only on the interest rate, but APR gives you the true cost of your loan. This guide explains both and helps you make smarter comparisons.
Just the interest charged on your loan
Interest rate + fees + other costs
What is Interest Rate?
The interest rate is the percentage charged by the lender for borrowing the principal amount. It's the base cost of your loan, expressed as a yearly percentage. This rate determines your monthly mortgage payment.
Example: How Interest Rate Works
On a $300,000 loan at 6.5% interest rate:
This payment only covers principal and interest. It doesn't include property taxes, insurance, or PMI which are separate costs.
Interest rate is what lenders advertise most prominently. It's what you see in rate comparison tables and headlines. However, it doesn't show the complete picture.
What is APR (Annual Percentage Rate)?
APR includes the interest rate plus other costs of getting the loan: origination fees, closing costs, broker fees, discount points, and more. APR gives you a more complete picture of the total loan cost.
What APR Includes
Example: APR vs Interest Rate
Same $300,000 loan with $6,000 in fees:
The APR is higher because it spreads the $6,000 in fees across the loan term.
Why APR is Always Higher Than Interest Rate
APR adds all loan costs on top of the base interest rate. Since fees and costs are positive numbers, APR must be higher (or equal in rare cases where there are zero fees).
Typical APR vs Interest Rate Gap
| Loan Type | Typical Fees | APR Difference |
|---|---|---|
| Mortgage | 2-5% of loan amount | 0.15-0.50% |
| Auto Loan | Lower fees | 0.10-0.25% |
| Personal Loan | 1-8% origination | 0.25-2.00% |
| Credit Card | Annual fees, etc. | APR = Interest Rate (usually) |
The gap varies significantly by loan type. Mortgages have more fees, so the APR gap is larger. Personal loans with high origination fees can have a 1-2% gap.
When to Use Interest Rate vs APR
- Calculating your monthly payment
- Comparing rates when you plan to pay off early
- Understanding the base cost of borrowing
- Comparing total loan costs between lenders
- Understanding the true cost of borrowing
- Comparing loans with different fee structures
- Deciding whether to pay points to lower rate
APR assumes you'll keep the loan for the full term (e.g., 30 years). If you plan to sell or refinance earlier, the APR calculation spreads fees over a longer period than you'll actually have the loan. In this case, compare interest rate + total upfront fees.
How to Compare Loans Using APR
Example: Two Loan Offers
You're comparing two $300,000 mortgage offers. Which is better?
Lender A has lower monthly payment ($50/month less) but higher upfront fees ($4,500 more). Lender B has higher monthly payment but lower fees. APR helps compare total cost.
Decision Framework
Choose Lender A. The $4,500 extra fees are paid back after 90 months (7.5 years) through $50/month savings. After that, you save $50/month for the remaining term.
Choose Lender B. You won't stay long enough to recover the higher fees from Lender A. Lower upfront costs are better for short-term homeownership.
APR Limitations to Know
APR doesn't include property taxes, homeowners insurance, PMI, or HOA fees. These are significant ongoing costs not reflected in APR comparisons.
APR spreads fees over the entire loan term. If you sell or refinance early, you've paid fees upfront but won't benefit from the lower rate over the full term.
APR on adjustable-rate mortgages is calculated assuming the rate stays at the initial level, which rarely happens. APR is less useful for ARM comparisons.
Some lenders charge fees not included in APR (like appraisal fees paid separately). Always ask for a complete fee breakdown, not just APR.
Discount Points and APR
Discount points let you pay upfront to lower your interest rate. One point = 1% of loan amount. Points increase your upfront costs but reduce your monthly payment.
Example: Buying Points
$300,000 loan comparison:
You save $97/month by paying $6,000 in points. Breakeven = $6,000 ÷ $97 = 62 months (~5.2 years). If you stay longer than 5.2 years, buying points makes sense.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a lower APR always better?
Not necessarily. A lower APR might mean lower fees but a higher interest rate, which gives you higher monthly payments. Consider your timeline: if you'll sell or refinance early, a higher APR with lower fees might cost less overall.
Why do lenders advertise interest rate instead of APR?
Interest rates look more attractive than APR. Lenders want to catch your attention with the lower number. By law, APR must be disclosed, but it's often shown less prominently. Always ask for both numbers when comparing offers.
How accurate is APR?
APR is regulated and calculated using a standard formula, making it reliable for comparing offers from different lenders. However, some costs vary by situation (like title insurance) and may not be perfectly comparable.
Should I negotiate fees instead of rate?
Both matter. Lower fees reduce your upfront costs; lower rate reduces monthly payments. Ask lenders to waive or reduce origination fees, and compare the APR after negotiations. Sometimes lenders offer "lender credits" to cover closing costs in exchange for a slightly higher rate.
What's a good APR for a mortgage?
APR varies with market rates. Compare APRs from 3-5 lenders for the same loan type and term. The "best" APR is typically 0.25-0.50% above the best available interest rate. If you see an APR more than 1% above the interest rate, the lender may be charging excessive fees.
Calculate Your Real Costs
Use our mortgage calculator to see exact payments and compare different scenarios.
Try Mortgage CalculatorDisclaimer: This guide provides general information for educational purposes. APR calculations vary by lender and loan type. Always request Loan Estimates from lenders for accurate comparisons specific to your situation.