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Trade Equity

What Is Trade Equity?

Trade equity is the difference between a vehicle’s trade-in value and the remaining balance on its loan.

If the trade-in value exceeds the loan balance, the borrower has positive trade equity. If the loan balance exceeds the trade-in value, the borrower has negative equity.

Trade equity plays a central role when replacing a vehicle before the current loan is fully repaid.

Why It Matters

Trade equity:

  • Affects the amount financed on a new vehicle
  • Influences monthly payment
  • Determines whether debt carries over

Positive trade equity can reduce the principal on a new loan. Negative trade equity increases the financed amount and total interest paid.

Understanding trade equity helps borrowers evaluate whether trading in a vehicle is financially sound.

How Trade Equity Works

Trade equity is calculated by subtracting the outstanding loan balance from the vehicle’s trade-in value.

Example: If a vehicle is worth $15,000 and the remaining loan balance is $12,000, the borrower has $3,000 in positive trade equity.

If the loan balance is $18,000 and the vehicle is worth $15,000, the borrower has $3,000 in negative equity that may be rolled into the new loan.

Rolling negative equity increases overall borrowing.

Trade Equity vs. Trade-In Value

Trade Equity → Value after subtracting loan balance
Trade-In Value → Dealer’s offered vehicle value

Loan balance determines equity position.

FAQs About Trade Equity

Can trade equity be used as a down payment?
Positive equity can reduce the amount financed on a new vehicle.

Does negative equity affect loan approval?
High negative equity may limit financing options.

Is trade equity the same as market value?
Market value determines trade-in value, but equity depends on remaining loan balance.

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