Car Depreciation Calculator
Estimate car depreciation, future resale value, trade-in value, annual value loss, monthly depreciation, cost per mile, loan balance, loan-to-value ratio, and negative equity risk. Compare straight-line, declining-balance, custom year-by-year, and mileage-adjusted depreciation methods.
Calculate Car Depreciation
Mileage and Condition Adjustment
Loan / Negative Equity Check
Result
| Output | Value | Meaning |
|---|
Year-by-Year Value Projection
| Year | Rate | Estimated value | Annual loss | Loan balance |
|---|
Formula Steps
What Is a Car Depreciation Calculator?
A Car Depreciation Calculator estimates how much value a vehicle may lose over time. It helps estimate future resale value, trade-in value, depreciation loss, value retained, monthly depreciation, annual depreciation, cost per mile, loan balance, loan-to-value ratio, and negative equity risk.
Depreciation is one of the largest hidden costs of car ownership. Fuel, insurance, loan interest, and maintenance are visible monthly expenses, but depreciation quietly reduces the car’s market value. FTC explains that with rare exceptions, the older a car gets, the less it is worth, and damage or repairs can reduce the value further. ([consumer.ftc.gov](https://consumer.ftc.gov/articles/auto-trade-ins-and-negative-equity-when-you-owe-more-your-car-worth?utm_source=chatgpt.com))
Car Depreciation Formula
The most common market-value depreciation model is declining balance:
\[ Future\ Value = Purchase\ Price \times (1-r)^t \]
Here, \(r\) is the annual depreciation rate and \(t\) is years of ownership. Total depreciation is:
\[ Depreciation = Purchase\ Price - Future\ Value \]
Value retained is:
\[ Value\ Retained = \frac{Future\ Value}{Purchase\ Price}\times100 \]
Cost per mile is:
\[ Cost\ Per\ Mile=\frac{Total\ Depreciation}{Total\ Miles} \]
Straight-Line Depreciation
Straight-line depreciation assumes the car loses the same dollar amount of value each year until it reaches a selected residual value:
\[ Annual\ Depreciation=\frac{Purchase\ Price-Residual\ Value}{Years} \]
This method is simple and useful for planning, but real car market depreciation is usually not perfectly straight. Many vehicles lose more value in the early years and less value later.
Declining-Balance Depreciation
Declining-balance depreciation applies a percentage loss to the remaining value each year:
\[ V_t=V_{t-1}(1-r) \]
This often better represents market behavior because a vehicle’s first-year dollar loss may be larger than later-year dollar loss. For example, \(15\%\) of a \(35,000\) vehicle is \(5,250\), but \(15\%\) of a \(20,000\) used vehicle is \(3,000\).
First-Year Heavy Depreciation
Many vehicles lose value faster in the early stage of ownership. The calculator includes a first-year heavy depreciation model:
\[ V_1=P(1-r_1) \]
\[ V_t=V_{t-1}(1-r_2) \quad \text{for later years} \]
Here, \(r_1\) is the first-year rate and \(r_2\) is the later-year rate.
Custom Year-by-Year Depreciation
The custom method lets users enter rates such as:
20, 15, 12, 10, 8
This means the vehicle loses \(20\%\) in year 1, \(15\%\) in year 2, \(12\%\) in year 3, \(10\%\) in year 4, and \(8\%\) in year 5. This is useful when users have model-specific estimates or want to run conservative scenarios.
Mileage Adjustment
Mileage affects value. A car with much higher-than-average mileage may be worth less than a similar vehicle with average mileage. The calculator uses a simplified mileage adjustment:
\[ Excess\ Miles = Actual\ Miles - Expected\ Miles \]
\[ Mileage\ Adjustment = 1 - \left(\frac{Excess\ Miles}{1000}\times PenaltyRate\right) \]
If annual mileage is equal to the expected baseline, the mileage adjustment is neutral. If annual mileage is higher, estimated value is reduced. This is only an estimate; real market value varies by model, condition, and buyer demand.
Condition Adjustment
Condition matters because buyers pay more for clean, well-maintained vehicles with no accident history and complete service records. The calculator includes simple condition multipliers: excellent, very good, good, fair, and poor. For example, fair condition may reduce estimated value, while excellent condition may increase it.
Negative Equity
Negative equity occurs when you owe more on a vehicle loan than the car is worth. FTC explains that if you borrowed money to buy a car, it is possible to owe more than the car is worth; this is called negative equity. ([consumer.ftc.gov](https://consumer.ftc.gov/articles/auto-trade-ins-and-negative-equity-when-you-owe-more-your-car-worth?utm_source=chatgpt.com))
The formula is:
\[ Equity = Vehicle\ Value - Loan\ Balance \]
If equity is negative, then:
\[ Negative\ Equity = Loan\ Balance - Vehicle\ Value \]
CFPB has also noted that consumers with loans on vehicles with higher-than-average depreciation may find themselves with a larger unpaid balance relative to vehicle value than expected. ([consumerfinance.gov](https://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/cfpb_report-repossession-in-auto-finance_2025-01.pdf?utm_source=chatgpt.com))
Loan Balance Formula
The calculator estimates remaining auto loan balance using amortization. Monthly payment is:
\[ Payment=L\frac{i(1+i)^n}{(1+i)^n-1} \]
Remaining balance after \(p\) payments is:
\[ Balance=L(1+i)^p-Payment\frac{(1+i)^p-1}{i} \]
Here, \(L\) is original loan amount, \(i\) is monthly interest rate, \(n\) is total loan months, and \(p\) is months already paid.
Market Depreciation vs Tax Depreciation
This calculator estimates market-value depreciation, which is useful for resale, trade-in, private sale, insurance planning, and negative equity checks. Business/tax depreciation is different. IRS depreciation rules may involve MACRS, Section 179, listed property rules, business-use percentage, and annual limits. IRS 2025 Form 2106 instructions state that for 2025, total section 179 deduction, special depreciation allowance, and regular depreciation deduction cannot be more than \(20,200\) for passenger automobiles, multiplied by business-use percentage. ([irs.gov](https://www.irs.gov/instructions/i2106?utm_source=chatgpt.com))
Do not use this resale calculator as a tax deduction calculator. Tax depreciation should be calculated using current IRS guidance or a tax professional.
Worked Example
Suppose a car is purchased for \(35,000\), and the annual depreciation rate is \(15\%\) for 5 years. Using declining balance:
\[ Future\ Value=35,000(1-0.15)^5 \]
\[ Future\ Value=35,000(0.85)^5 \]
\[ Future\ Value\approx15,522 \]
Total depreciation:
\[ Depreciation=35,000-15,522=19,478 \]
Value retained:
\[ Value\ Retained=\frac{15,522}{35,000}\times100\approx44.35\% \]
Common Factors That Affect Car Depreciation
| Factor | Effect on depreciation | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Brand and model | Some vehicles hold value better | Reliability and demand affect resale |
| Mileage | Higher mileage often lowers value | More usage suggests more wear |
| Condition | Poor condition lowers value | Damage, repairs, and wear reduce buyer confidence |
| Accident history | Can reduce value significantly | Buyers and dealers discount damaged-history vehicles |
| Maintenance records | Good records can support value | Proof of care can improve trust |
| Fuel prices | Can change demand | Large vehicles and fuel-efficient vehicles respond differently |
| Loan term | Can affect equity risk | Long loans may amortize slower than value declines |
| Market conditions | Can raise or lower resale values | Supply, demand, interest rates, and incentives matter |
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter purchase price or current vehicle value.
- Select depreciation method: declining balance, straight-line, custom rates, or first-year heavy depreciation.
- Enter annual depreciation rates, residual percentage, or custom year-by-year rates.
- Enter annual mileage, expected mileage, mileage penalty, and condition adjustment.
- Enter loan amount, APR, loan term, and months paid if you want negative equity analysis.
- Click Calculate Depreciation.
- Review future value, depreciation loss, value retained, cost per mile, loan balance, and equity status.
Common Mistakes
| Mistake | Why it matters | Better approach |
|---|---|---|
| Ignoring depreciation | Monthly payment does not show value loss | Estimate resale value before buying |
| Using one rate for every car | Different vehicles depreciate differently | Run conservative and optimistic scenarios |
| Ignoring mileage | High mileage can reduce resale | Compare actual miles with market expectations |
| Ignoring condition | Damage lowers value | Keep maintenance records and repair history |
| Taking a very long loan | Loan balance may exceed car value | Compare loan balance with projected vehicle value |
| Confusing resale depreciation and tax depreciation | Tax rules are different | Use IRS guidance or a tax professional for business deductions |
Why This Page Does Not Include Exam Score Tables
A Car Depreciation Calculator is a personal finance and vehicle ownership calculator, not an exam score calculator. Score guidelines, score tables, and next exam timetables do not apply directly to this page. The equivalent useful material is market-value depreciation formulas, loan balance formulas, negative equity explanation, mileage and condition adjustments, tax-vs-market depreciation notes, and ownership planning guidance.
Car Depreciation Calculator FAQs
What is car depreciation?
Car depreciation is the loss in vehicle value over time because of age, mileage, condition, wear, market demand, and other factors.
What is the declining-balance depreciation formula?
The formula is \(Future\ Value=Purchase\ Price(1-r)^t\), where \(r\) is annual depreciation rate and \(t\) is years.
What is straight-line car depreciation?
Straight-line depreciation spreads the expected value loss evenly across years until the car reaches a selected residual value.
What is negative equity?
Negative equity means the loan balance is higher than the vehicle value.
How does mileage affect depreciation?
Higher-than-expected mileage can lower resale value because it suggests more wear and shorter remaining useful life.
Is this calculator for tax depreciation?
No. This calculator estimates resale or market-value depreciation. Business tax depreciation follows separate IRS rules.
Can a car appreciate instead of depreciate?
Most cars depreciate, but rare collector cars, limited models, or unusual market conditions can sometimes cause appreciation.
How can I reduce depreciation?
Choose a vehicle with strong resale value, avoid overpaying, keep mileage reasonable, maintain the car well, avoid damage, and keep service records.
Suggested internal links: car affordability calculator, auto loan calculator, monthly car payment calculator, fuel cost calculator, loan payoff calculator, refinance calculator, and budget calculator.

