What Is This New Car Loan Everyone is Talking About?

What Is This New Car Loan Everyone is Talking About?

Raj Singarajah

Buying a car? Understand the new 2026 loan, and save over RM 5,000.

Key Takeaways

1

The new Reducing Balance car loan is cheaper than the old Fixed/Flat Rate loan as interest is calculated only on remaining debt.

2

The advertised flat loan rate (e.g., 3%) is misleading, having a much higher Effective Interest Rate (EIR) up to 5.72%.

3

Only the Reducing Balance car loan rewards responsibility, letting you save interest via early settlement or extra payments.

For decades, Malaysian car buyers had no choice: you took the Fixed/Flat Rate loan the bank gave you. But the landscape has changed. The new Reducing Balance loan is finally giving power back to the consumer.

If you are looking at a Perodua Ativa (RM 60,000), the difference between "the old way" and "the new way" is big, it's pretty much the difference between paying for a holiday or giving that money to the bank.

Here are the only three things you need to know about this new loan type: how much is actually the interest rate and amount, what happens if you settle the loan earlier, and how extra payments impact your loan. We’lll use that Perodua Ativa example with our Car Loan Calculator, using a RM 54,000 loan (90%) over 7 years as our guide.

1. Why 3% Was Never 3%: What is the Actual Interest?

The trickiest part about the old (Rule 78-based) loan is the claim to have a 3.00% interest rate. Our calculator helps you "see through" the sales talk by showing you the Effective Interest Rate (EIR) which is the rate you're actually paying. 

Loan snapshot

Start with your price, loan amount, rate, and years

RM
RM

Down payment: RM 6,000

Results

Fixed/Flat Loan

Rule 78
Monthly payment
RM 778
Actual loan amount
RM 65,340
Total interest due
RM 11,340
Actual interest ratei
5.72%
Best option

Reducing Balance Loan

NEW 2026!
Monthly payment
RM 714
Actual loan amount
RM 59,936
Total interest due
RM 5,936
Actual interest ratei
3.04%
Car Loan Calculator: Loan snapshot (Open Calculator)

You can see above that the actual interest rate you pay for the loan is a whopping 5.72%, whereas the new Reducing Balance loan is closer to the actual advertised amount. 

The simple truth: The new Reducing Balance loan is much cheaper because you only pay interest on the money you still owe. In the old flat loans, the bank charges you interest on the full RM 54,000 even in your very last month of payment!

2. Selling Your Car Early? The New Loan Is Cheaper!

Early Settlement Scenario

Explore what happens if you settle the loan early

Results

Fixed/Flat Loan

Rule 78
Balance due
RM 0
Settlement amount
RM 0
Total savings*
RM 0

*Max settlement discount

Best option

Reducing Balance Loan

NEW 2026!
Balance due
RM 0
Settlement amount
RM 0
Total savings
RM 0
Car Loan Calculator: Early Settlement Scenario (Open Calculator)
 

In the past, selling your car after a few years usually felt like a losing deal. That's because old loans use something called Rule 78, which makes sure the bank gets most of its interest profit from you right at the start. The new loan type makes things much fairer if you decide to sell after 5 years.

  • Fixed/Flat Loan: You’d need RM 17,716 to settle the debt. Note: The Settlement Amount here assumes the bank is giving you the maximum amount, which may not happen.
  • Reducing Balance Loan: You’d only need RM 16,601.

The win for you: With the Reducing Balance loan, you walk away with more cash in your pocket. Your monthly payments are actually doing the hard work of clearing your debt, not just lining the bank's pockets with interest.

3. Paying a Little Extra Now Makes an Impact.

Extra Payments

Add extra payments to reduce your loan faster

RM
RM
Results

Fixed/Flat Loan

Rule 78
Actual loan amount
RM 47,000
Interest saved
RM 0
Best option

Reducing Balance Loan

NEW 2026!
Actual loan amount
RM 42,863
Interest saved
RM 798

Conclusion

With the NEW 2026 Reducing Balance Loan, you keep about RM 798 more versus the old flat loan for this setup.

Car Loan Calculator: Extra Payments (Open Calculator)

The best part about the 2026 loan style is the freedom it gives you. If you get a bonus and want to knock off some of your debt (say RM 5,000 in Year 2 and RM 3,000 in Year 4) look at the difference:

  • Fixed/Flat Loan: You save RM 0. The bank already "locked in" their profit, so paying early doesn't save you a cent in interest.
  • Reducing Balance Loan: You save RM 1,205 in interest.

The win for you: For the first time, car owners get rewarded for being responsible. Every extra Ringgit you pay chops down your debt and cancels out future interest.

4. Tldr; Four Things to Remember

Conclusion

Your final comparison and takeaways

Extra Payments

Payment Breakdown

Fixed/Flat LoanRM 47,000
85%
15%
Principal: RM 40,000
Interest: RM 7,000
Reducing Balance LoanRM 43,660
92%
8%
Principal: RM 40,000
Interest: RM 3,660

Potential Savings with Reducing Balance

- RM 3,340

-47.7% less interest

  • Flat Rate Loans are more expensive. The stated interest rate of 3.50% translates to a higher Effective Interest Rate (EIR) of 6.74%.
  • Reducing Balance Loans are cheaper. The stated interest rate of 3.50% translates to an Effective Interest Rate (EIR) of 3.56%, which is closer to the stated rate.
  • Flat Rate Loans often use Rule 78, which locks in most interest upfront. Extra payments or early settlement offer minimal savings on total cost.
  • Reducing Balance Loans calculate interest on the remaining balance. Extra payments and early settlement reduce both principal and future interest payments.

Want to dive deeper?

Explore detailed breakdowns, settlement scenarios, and extra payment impacts for each loan type.

Learning Resources

Which Mode Should I Use?

Comparison Mode

Best for understanding the difference between flat and reducing balance loans side-by-side

Flat Rate Mode

Use this if your bank offered you a flat rate loan and you want to understand Rule 78

Reducing Balance Mode

Use this for most car loans in Malaysia. Explore how early settlement truly saves you money

Key Terms Explained

Effective Annual Rate (EAR)

The true cost of borrowing when interest is compounded. Often higher than the stated rate for flat rate loans.

Rule 78

A method that front-loads interest in flat rate loans. Early repayment gives less rebate than expected because most interest is paid upfront.

Amortization

A method of calculating loans where interest is recalculated monthly on the remaining principal. Early repayment provides substantial interest savings.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is flat rate or reducing balance better?

Reducing balance is almost always better. It typically costs 30-40% less in total interest. Always compare before accepting an offer.

Should I settle my loan early?

For reducing balance loans, yes! Early settlement saves significant interest. For flat rate loans, check the rebate calculation carefully. Use this calculator to see the exact savings.

What's the impact of extra payments?

Extra payments significantly reduce your loan tenure and total interest paid. Even small extra payments compound over time. This calculator shows you exactly how much you can save.

Car Loan Calculator: Conclusion (Open Calculator)

In short, the new reducing balance loan is much cheaper compared to the old Rule-78 based flat-rate loans. You can see that the Reducing Balance car loan (even with no extra payments) is RM5,404 cheaper compared to the Flat Rate car loan. In short, four takeaways to remember:

  1. Don't just look at the 3%: A 3% flat rate can have a much higher EIR.
  2. Reducing Balance is your friend: It’s the "honest" way to borrow, with a real rate of ~3%.
  3. Flat loans have a "Rule-78 memory": Flat rate loans lock in interest early. Reducing Balance loans stay flexible.
  4. You’re in control: Only the Reducing Balance loan lets you save money by paying off your car faster.

The easiest way to see how this works for your own budget is to try it out. Use our Car Loan Calculator to flip between flat and reducing modes or compare them directly. You'll see exactly how much you can save on your specific dream car.

5. Your 5-Minute "Deal-Checker" Action Plan

Buying a car is exciting, but don't let the paperwork overwhelm you. Before you sign on the dotted line, run through this quick 5-minute check to make sure you're getting the best deal possible:

  1. Ask the Right Question: Don't just ask about the interest rate. Ask the bank officer point-blank: "Is this a Reducing Balance loan or a Fixed/Flat loan?" 
  2. Verify the "Real" Rate: Plug the offer into our Car Loan Calculator. Look for the EIR (Effective Interest Rate). If it jumps from a "3% deal" to over 5%, you’ve just spotted the old-style flat rate trap.
  3. Check the "True Fee": Look at the Total Interest amount. This is the actual fee the bank is charging you to borrow the money. See how much you pay monthly. Ask yourself: "Is this car still worth the price tag plus this extra fee?"
  4. Plan Your Exit: Use the Early Settlement feature in our tool. If you plan to sell the car in 5 years, will you owe the bank more than the car is worth? The new Reducing Balance loans help you avoid this "underwater" trap.
  5. Test Your "Bonus" Savings: If you think you'll have extra cash from a bonus or a raise in the future, see how much interest you can "kill" by making Extra Payments. Remember, this only works if you choose the Reducing Balance option!

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