📊 Accounting guide

How to Calculate Interest Expense

Interest expense is the cost of borrowing money — and one of the most important line items separating operating performance from financing cost on the income statement. This guide covers the formula, three formula variants for different scenarios, six worked examples, how to handle day-count basis, where interest expense sits on the income statement, why it differs from a loan payment, and the most common calculation mistakes.

Last updated: March 26, 2026

What is interest expense?

Interest expense is the cost a borrower incurs for using someone else's money over a period of time. Businesses record it when they carry debt — loans, notes payable, bonds, credit facilities, or lease-related borrowing. Individuals encounter it on mortgages, personal loans, and credit cards.

In accounting, interest expense is recognised in the period it accrues, not necessarily when cash is paid. Under accrual accounting, if interest accumulates monthly but is paid quarterly, three monthly journal entries still debit interest expense each month.

From an analysis standpoint, interest expense answers questions such as: how costly is the debt structure? How much operating profit is consumed by financing costs? Would refinancing at a lower rate materially improve earnings? These questions matter to accountants, lenders, investors, and business owners alike.

Interest expense formula

Interest Expense = Principal × Annual Rate × Time

Three inputs: principal (outstanding balance), annual rate (as a decimal — divide % by 100), time (fraction of the year the debt is outstanding).

Variant 1 — Full year (simplest)

Interest = Principal × Annual rate
Use when the balance is constant for the entire year. Time = 1, so it drops out.

Variant 2 — Partial period (months)

Interest = Principal × Annual rate × (Months ÷ 12)
Most common for quarterly accruals, monthly closes, and partial-year loans. 3 months → × 3/12. 6 months → × 6/12.

Variant 3 — Daily (with day-count basis)

Interest = Principal × Annual rate × (Days ÷ Day basis)
Day basis is 360 (US commercial) or 365 (bonds, personal loans). Same annual rate ÷ 360 produces a slightly higher daily rate than ÷ 365.

Variant 4 — Average balance

Interest ≈ ((Beginning balance + Ending balance) ÷ 2) × Rate × Time
When the balance changes throughout the year — common in revolving credit, term loan amortisation, and financial modelling.

Interest expense vs loan payment — a critical distinction

A loan payment is not interest expense. Most loan payments contain two components: a principal repayment that reduces the liability on the balance sheet, and an interest portion that is the actual expense.

Example: $1,200/month payment on a $100,000 loan at 8% — Year 1 first payment

Principal repayment ~$533 — reduces balance sheet debt
Interest expense ~$667 — hits income statement

As the loan amortises, the balance decreases, so interest expense falls each period and the principal portion grows — even if the total payment stays the same. This is why total cash paid over a loan term far exceeds the original principal.

Where interest expense sits on the income statement

Interest expense is a non-operating expense — it appears below operating income (EBIT) because it relates to financing decisions, not core business operations. This placement is why EBIT and EBITDA are used to compare operating performance independently of how a company is financed.

+ Net revenue Top line
Cost of goods sold Direct costs
= Gross profit
Operating expenses (SG&A, D&A, R&D) Period costs
= Operating income (EBIT) ← Above the line
Interest expense ← This metric
= Pretax income (EBT)
Income tax expense
= Net income Bottom line

Higher interest expense directly reduces pretax income and net income. A company with $500,000 operating income but $150,000 interest expense has a pretax income of only $350,000 — the debt cost has consumed 30% of operating profit before taxes even begin.

Day-count basis — 360 vs 365

When calculating interest for a specific number of days, the denominator matters. Two conventions exist:

ConventionFormulaCommon useEffect
Actual/360 Principal × Rate × Days ÷ 360 US commercial loans, money markets, SOFR Slightly higher daily rate
Actual/365 Principal × Rate × Days ÷ 365 Bonds, mortgages, personal loans Lower daily rate
Example: $100,000 at 8% for 90 days
Actual/360: $100,000 × 8% × 90 ÷ 360 = $2,000
Actual/365: $100,000 × 8% × 90 ÷ 365 = $1,973
Difference: $27 — small on a single transaction but material at scale

How to calculate interest expense step by step

  1. Identify the outstanding principal. Use the current balance or the average balance for the period. For a revolving line of credit, use average daily balance if available.
  2. Find the annual interest rate. Convert from percentage to decimal — 8.5% becomes 0.085.
  3. Determine the time fraction. Full year = 1. Six months = 6/12 = 0.5. One quarter = 3/12 = 0.25. For daily calculations, use actual days ÷ day basis.
  4. Multiply: Principal × Rate × Time.
  5. Add any fees if computing total cost of borrowing. Origination fees, service charges, and commitment fees are not interest expense in the accounting sense, but they affect effective borrowing cost.

Worked examples

Full year

Business loan — annual

Loan: $250,000 · Rate: 6% · Time: 1 year

$250,000 × 0.06 × 1 = $15,000

✅ Annual interest expense = $15,000

Partial period

Six-month borrowing

Loan: $80,000 · Rate: 9% · Time: 6 months

$80,000 × 0.09 × (6÷12) = $3,600

✅ 6-month interest = $3,600

Average balance

Revolving credit line

Begin: $500K · End: $420K · Rate: 7%

Avg = ($500K + $420K) ÷ 2 = $460,000
$460,000 × 0.07 = $32,200

✅ Annual interest ≈ $32,200

Monthly accrual

Credit card balance

Balance: $12,000 · Rate: 18% · Time: 1 month

$12,000 × 0.18 × (1÷12) = $180

✅ Monthly interest = $180

Quarterly note

Notes payable — Q1 accrual

Note: $60,000 · Rate: 10% · Time: 3 months

$60,000 × 0.10 × (3÷12) = $1,500

✅ Quarterly interest = $1,500

Rate comparison

Two borrowing options

Both $200,000 · Option A: 5.5% · Option B: 7%

A: $200K × 5.5% = $11,000
B: $200K × 7.0% = $14,000

Rate difference = $3,000/yr in extra interest cost

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Using total loan payment as interest expense. A $1,200 monthly payment on a mortgage is not $1,200 interest expense — most of it is principal repayment. Only the interest portion hits the income statement.
  • Forgetting to convert rate to decimal. 8.5% in the formula should be 0.085, not 8.5. Multiplying by 8.5 instead of 0.085 gives a result 100× too large.
  • Ignoring partial-period adjustment. A loan outstanding for 6 months is not a full year. Always multiply by the time fraction.
  • Using beginning or ending balance when average is more appropriate. For revolving debt or amortising loans, using only the opening or closing balance can over- or understate interest expense significantly.
  • Confusing nominal rate with effective rate. When interest compounds more frequently than annually, the effective rate exceeds the stated nominal rate. For simple-interest estimates this rarely matters, but for bond amortisation or lease accounting it can be material.
  • Mixing accrual and cash timing. Interest expense in the income statement reflects when cost is incurred, not when cash leaves. Under accrual accounting, they can be different periods.

Frequently asked questions

What is the formula for interest expense?

Interest Expense = Principal × Annual Rate × Time. Principal is the outstanding balance, annual rate is expressed as a decimal, and time is the fraction of the year the debt is outstanding. For partial periods, divide months by 12 or days by the day-count basis.

Is interest expense the same as a loan payment?

No. A loan payment typically includes both principal repayment and interest. Only the interest portion is interest expense — the principal portion reduces the balance sheet liability. Treating the entire payment as expense overstates the income statement charge.

How do you calculate interest expense for part of a year?

Multiply the annual rate by the time fraction. Six months = 6 ÷ 12 = 0.5. One quarter = 3 ÷ 12 = 0.25. One month = 1 ÷ 12 ≈ 0.0833. For daily calculations, use actual days ÷ 360 (commercial) or ÷ 365 (bonds).

Where does interest expense appear on the income statement?

Below operating income (EBIT), as a non-operating expense. This is why EBIT and EBITDA are used to compare operating performance independently of financing structure — interest expense is excluded from those metrics.

Can interest expense reduce net income?

Yes — directly. Higher interest expense lowers pretax income, which in turn reduces income tax expense, but net income still falls. A business with $500K operating income and $150K interest expense has only $350K pretax income before taxes apply.

What if the loan balance changes during the year?

Use the average outstanding balance — typically (beginning balance + ending balance) ÷ 2. For greater precision, especially with revolving credit, use the average daily balance if it is available from the lender.