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Upside-Down on Your Car Loan? Here's What to Do
Being "upside-down" (or underwater) on a car loan means you owe more than the car is currently worth. It's common — cars depreciate fast — but it's a position worth fixing. Here's why it happens and what to do.
→ See how extra payments close a negative-equity gapWhy it happens
- Fast depreciation. New cars can lose 20%+ of value in the first year, often faster than the loan balance falls.
- Long loan terms. 72- or 84-month loans pay down principal slowly, so you stay underwater longer.
- Small or no down payment. Starting with little equity means the balance outpaces the value early on.
- Rolling old debt in. Adding a previous loan's balance onto a new car starts you deeper underwater.
How to fix it
- Make extra principal payments. The fastest way to close the gap is to pay down the balance faster than the car depreciates.
- Keep the car longer. Over time the loan balance falls below the car's value — just keep paying and avoid trading in early.
- Refinance to a shorter term if you can afford the higher payment; you'll build equity faster.
- Avoid rolling negative equity into a new loan — it just moves the problem and makes it bigger.
How to avoid it next time
Prevention is easier than the cure. Put at least 20% down so you start with equity, choose the shortest loan term you can afford (avoid 72–84 months), and don't roll an old loan's balance into a new car. Buying slightly used also helps, since the steepest depreciation happens in the first year or two of a car's life — letting someone else absorb it means your loan balance is far more likely to stay below the car's value.
The bottom line
Negative equity is normal early in a loan, especially with long terms and small down payments. The cure is simple: pay down principal faster and keep the car long enough for value to catch up to the balance.
→ Build equity faster — see your payoff plan freeRelated: Extra payments explained · Should you refinance?