Reducing vs fixed interest, in plain words
With a reducing rate, interest is charged only on what you still owe. As you repay, the balance shrinks and so does the interest. Most UAE personal loans work this way.
With a fixed (flat) rate, interest is calculated on the full original loan for the whole tenure — even the part you've already repaid. That's why a flat rate always costs more than a reducing rate with the same number.
A flat 3% can cost roughly the same as a reducing 5.5–6%. Always ask your bank which type they're quoting — the comparison tool above shows the difference instantly.
Why paying a little extra saves a lot
On a reducing-rate loan, every extra dirham you pay goes straight into the principal. A smaller principal means less interest next month, which means even more of your EMI hits the principal — the savings snowball.
Even a small monthly top-up can cut several months off your loan and save real money in interest. Use the "Pay extra, finish early" tool above with your own numbers to see it.
One tip: check your bank's early-settlement policy first. Most UAE banks allow partial payments with a small fee (often 1% of the prepaid amount, capped) — usually still well worth it.