Beyond the Sticker Price
Two cars with the same MSRP can differ by thousands in total cost depending on depreciation, fuel economy & insurance rates.
Go beyond the sticker price. Calculate the true cost of owning a vehicle over 1–10 years — including EMI, depreciation, fuel, insurance, maintenance, taxes & parking. Free tool by The Vehicle247.
EMI, depreciation, fuel, insurance, maintenance, taxes, parking & tolls.
See how costs evolve across your full ownership period.
Know your true operating cost per mile or kilometre driven.
USD, GBP, EUR, INR, AUD & CAD supported.
Complete breakdown of what this vehicle will truly cost you.
The purchase price is just the beginning. The real expense hides in the years that follow.
Two cars with the same MSRP can differ by thousands in total cost depending on depreciation, fuel economy & insurance rates.
Covers every major expense: loan payments, depreciation, fuel, insurance, maintenance, registration, taxes & parking.
See how costs shift over time. Depreciation is heaviest early on; maintenance rises as the vehicle ages.
The single most useful metric for comparing vehicles. Includes every ownership expense divided by total miles driven.
Run the calculator for each vehicle on your shortlist. The cheapest to buy is often not the cheapest to own.
No sign‑up, no hidden fees. Use the vehicle cost calculator as many times as you like.
Total cost of ownership (TCO) is the complete amount you spend on a vehicle from the day you buy it to the day you sell or scrap it. It goes far beyond the purchase price to include financing interest, depreciation, fuel, insurance premiums, scheduled maintenance, unexpected repairs, government fees & daily expenses like parking and tolls.
Understanding TCO is critical because two vehicles with identical sticker prices can have vastly different real‑world costs. A fuel‑efficient sedan with low insurance and slow depreciation can save you thousands compared to a thirsty SUV that loses value quickly — even if both cost the same on the lot.
Three simple sections, one comprehensive result.
Vehicle price, down payment, interest rate & loan term. The calculator computes your monthly EMI and total interest.
Annual mileage, fuel economy, fuel price, insurance, maintenance, registration & parking. Use your actual figures or the defaults as a starting point.
Choose 1–10 years. Hit calculate to see summary cards, a category breakdown with proportional bars, a year‑by‑year cost table & your cost per mile.
Plan every aspect of vehicle ownership with our free calculator suite.
Common questions about vehicle ownership costs.
Total cost of ownership (TCO) is the sum of every expense associated with buying, financing, operating & maintaining a vehicle over a given period — typically 3 to 10 years. It includes the purchase price, loan interest, depreciation, fuel, insurance, maintenance, taxes & parking.
The purchase price is a one‑time cost. Running expenses like fuel, insurance & maintenance accumulate every year and can exceed the original price within 5–7 years. Two cars at the same MSRP can differ by thousands in TCO depending on fuel economy, depreciation rate & insurance premiums.
For most new vehicles, depreciation is the single largest cost, accounting for 35–45% of total ownership expense over 5 years. For used vehicles past their steepest depreciation curve, fuel and maintenance typically dominate.
New cars typically depreciate 20–25% in year one and 10–15% per year thereafter. The default in this calculator is 15%. Trucks and popular SUVs hold value better (10–12%); luxury and niche vehicles depreciate faster (18–22%).
Yes. The calculator computes your monthly EMI using the standard amortization formula, then multiplies by the number of months in your ownership period (capped at your loan term). Total interest paid is shown as a separate category.
Total ownership cost is divided by total miles driven (annual mileage × ownership years). This single figure includes every expense — not just fuel — giving you the truest measure of what each mile actually costs.
Yes. Run the calculator for vehicle A, note the total and cost‑per‑mile, then change the inputs to vehicle B’s figures. The cost‑per‑mile comparison is the clearest way to see which vehicle is cheaper to own long‑term.
All calculations run locally in your browser. No data is sent to any server or stored anywhere.