R
%
Lowest monthlyLowest total cost
TermMonthly PaymentTotal InterestTotal RepaidInterest / Loan
10 yearslowest totalR 16 025R 722 962R 1 922 96260.2%
15 yearsR 13 079R 1 154 294R 2 354 29496.2%
20 yearsR 11 780R 1 627 133R 2 827 133135.6%
25 yearsR 11 117R 2 134 980R 3 334 980177.9%
30 yearslowest monthlyR 10 753R 2 671 158R 3 871 158222.6%
Key insight: A 10-year term saves R 1 948 196 in interest vs a 30-year term — but costs R 5 271 more per month.

Three levels of detail — pick yours

Tier 1 — Simple

Loan amount, rate → comparison table for 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 years with lowest-monthly and lowest-total highlights.

Tier 2 — Extended

SVG grouped bar chart, interest-multiple analysis, optimal term finder from monthly budget.

Tier 3 — Professional

Custom terms with extra payment modeling, break-even analysis, rate × term sensitivity matrix.

Understanding Bond Term vs Total Cost The formula • Trade-off • Example

The Monthly vs Total Cost Trade-Off

Every bond term decision involves a fundamental trade-off: a longer term lowers your monthly payment and improves short-term affordability, but dramatically increases the total interest paid over the life of the loan. A shorter term requires higher monthly payments but saves you hundreds of thousands in interest.

The reason is compound interest. Interest accrues on your outstanding balance each month. The longer the balance remains high, the more interest accumulates — and the exponent in the PMT formula means this effect is non-linear.

The PMT Formula

M = P × [r(1 + r)n] ÷ [(1 + r)n − 1]

Total Interest = (M × n) − P     Interest Multiple = Total Interest ÷ P

Where P = principal, r = monthly rate (annual ÷ 12 ÷ 100), n = total months (term × 12). The key: n appears as an exponent. Doubling the term more than doubles total interest paid.

Worked Example

Lindiwe and Ruan both take R1,200,000 bonds at the current prime rate of 10.25%.

Lindiwe chooses 15 years: R 13 079/month, total interest = R 1 154 294

Ruan chooses 20 years: R 11 780/month, total interest = R 1 627 133

Thandi chooses 30 years: R 10 753/month, total interest = R 2 671 158

Choosing 20 vs 30 years saves R 1 044 025 in interest — at a cost of only R 1 027 extra per month.

If Thandi makes Ruan's extra R 1 027/month from day one on a 30-year bond, she would pay it off in roughly 20 years anyway — with full flexibility to drop back to the minimum in tough months.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most common bond term in South Africa?

20 years is the most common bond term in South Africa. It balances manageable monthly payments with reasonable total interest. Banks approve terms from 5 to 30 years, with most capping the term so it ends before the borrower turns 70 or 75.

How much interest do I save by choosing 20 vs 30 years in South Africa?

For a R1,200,000 bond at 10.25%:

  • 20 years: R 11 780/month, total interest R 1 627 133
  • 30 years: R 10 753/month, total interest R 2 671 158

Choosing 20 vs 30 years saves approximately R 1 044 025 in interest — for just R 1 027 extra per month. Use Tier 1 above to calculate your exact saving.

Is a 30-year bond ever a good idea in South Africa?

A 30-year term can be a reasonable strategy if:

  • You are a young buyer (under 30) expecting significant income growth
  • Cash flow is tight now but you plan regular extra payments
  • You want maximum flexibility — you can always pay more, but cannot pay less than the contractual minimum

Under the NCA, there are no early settlement penalties on South African home loans registered after June 2007. Treat a 30-year term as a floor, not a target.

Can I change my bond term after registration in South Africa?

Yes, but it typically requires refinancing or re-registration, incurring new bond registration and attorney fees. Some banks allow term adjustments without full re-registration.

A more practical alternative is to make extra payments to pay off faster without formally changing the term — same economic outcome, zero admin costs, full flexibility to revert.

Does a shorter bond term mean a lower interest rate in South Africa?

Not automatically. South African banks primarily determine your rate based on credit risk (credit score, income stability, LTV ratio, DTI) — not the term chosen. However, some banks may offer marginal improvements for shorter terms or larger deposits because LTV decreases more quickly, reducing bank risk.