FinToolSuite

Mortgage Payment Calculator

Updated April 17, 2026 · Mortgage · Educational use only ·

Monthly principal and interest payment from home price and mortgage terms

Calculate monthly mortgage payment and total interest cost from home price, down payment, rate, and term. Enter interest rate and see the result instantly.

What this tool does

Enter home price, down payment, interest rate, and loan term in years. The calculator returns monthly principal and interest, total interest over term, total paid, loan amount, and loan-to-value ratio.


Enter Values

Formula Used
Monthly payment
Loan principal (price minus down payment)
Monthly interest rate
Total months

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Disclaimer

Results are estimates for educational purposes only. They do not constitute financial advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions.

What the Monthly Payment Actually Covers

The monthly mortgage payment calculated here covers only principal (reducing loan balance) and interest (cost of borrowing). Real mortgage payments typically include additional items that raise the total monthly cost meaningfully. Property tax — often 0.5-2.5% of home value annually, paid monthly through escrow. Homeowner insurance — often 0.3-1% of home value annually. Private mortgage insurance — required when down payment is below 20%, typically 0.5-1.5% of loan annually. HOA fees for planned communities or condos. Total housing cost often runs 25-40% above the principal-and-interest figure the calculator shows.

How Amortisation Works

Standard amortising mortgages have fixed monthly payments but the split between principal and interest shifts over time. Early payments are mostly interest because the loan balance is large. Late payments are mostly principal because the balance has shrunk. For a typical 30-year mortgage at 6%, the first year sees about 30% of each payment go to principal; the 30th year sees 90%+ going to principal. The calculator returns the fixed monthly payment but does not break out the shifting interest-principal split — for that, an amortisation schedule tool is needed.

Why the Rate Matters More Than People Realise

A 400,000 loan at 4% over 30 years costs 1,910 monthly and 287,478 total interest. The same loan at 7% costs 2,661 monthly and 557,960 total interest. The 3 percentage point rate difference increases monthly payment by 751 and total interest by 270,482 over the life of the loan. Rate has dramatic compound effect on total mortgage cost. Even a 0.25% rate difference saves or costs 15,000-25,000 over a typical 30-year mortgage. Shopping rates aggressively is one of the highest-leverage homebuyer actions.

Term Length Trade-Off

30-year mortgages have the lowest monthly payment but highest total interest. 15-year mortgages have 40-50% higher monthly payments but less than half the total interest. On a 400,000 loan at 6%, 30-year costs 2,398 monthly with 463,353 total interest. 15-year costs 3,375 monthly with 207,460 total interest. The 15-year pays 255,893 less in interest over the mortgage life — nearly two-thirds of the original loan value saved. Higher payment requires higher income to qualify, but total ownership cost is dramatically lower.

Worked Example for a Typical Home Purchase

Home price 400,000. Down payment 80,000 (20%). Rate 6.5%. Term 30 years. Loan amount: 320,000. Monthly payment: 2,023. Total paid over 30 years: 728,280. Total interest: 408,280. Loan-to-value: 80%. The buyer pays 408,280 in interest over the mortgage life — more than the original loan amount. Adding typical property tax (3,500 annually), insurance (1,200 annually), and no PMI (due to 20% down) brings true monthly housing cost to about 2,415 versus the calculated 2,023 principal-and-interest. Budget based on total housing cost rather than just principal-and-interest.

Why 20% Down Matters

Down payments below 20% typically trigger private mortgage insurance (PMI) charges of 0.5-1.5% of loan annually. On a 320,000 loan at 1% PMI, that is 3,200 annually or 267 monthly — adding meaningfully to the monthly payment. PMI continues until loan-to-value drops below 78% through principal paydown. Saving to 20% down often provides better total-cost outcomes than buying earlier with smaller down payment and paying PMI for years. The calculator shows loan-to-value so the PMI implication is visible directly.

The Extra Payment Effect

Making one extra mortgage payment annually reduces a 30-year mortgage to roughly 25 years. Biweekly payment schedules (paying half the monthly payment every two weeks, which equals 13 monthly payments annually rather than 12) achieve the same result automatically. On a 400,000 mortgage at 6%, extra annual payment saves 94,000 in interest and cuts 5 years off the term. Small extra payments have outsized effects because they reduce principal early, when interest cost is highest. The calculator does not model extra payments directly — run multiple scenarios with shorter terms to approximate the benefit.

Refinancing Considerations

Refinancing to a lower rate reduces monthly payment and total interest. Break-even analysis — how many months until interest savings cover refinance costs — determines whether refinancing makes sense. On a 400,000 mortgage, refinancing from 7% to 6% saves about 270 monthly. With 4,000 refinance costs, break-even is about 15 months. If the homeowner plans to stay in the home longer than the break-even period, refinancing is net positive. The calculator handles the monthly payment math for any combination of terms — compare against the current mortgage to estimate refinance benefit.

What the Calculator Does Not Include

Property taxes, homeowner insurance, private mortgage insurance. HOA fees or condo fees. Home maintenance costs (typically 1-2% of home value annually). Utility costs. Closing costs on the mortgage itself (typically 2-5% of loan amount). Prepayment penalties that some lenders charge. Tax deductibility of mortgage interest in jurisdictions where it applies. Adjustable rate adjustments that change monthly payment over time. The calculator focuses on fixed-rate principal-and-interest calculation.

Common Mortgage Calculation Mistakes

Budgeting based on principal-and-interest without accounting for taxes, insurance, and HOA. Focusing on monthly payment affordability rather than total interest cost. Using 30-year terms without comparing 15-year savings. Not shopping rates aggressively (0.25% differences matter). Forgetting PMI on sub-20% down payment scenarios. Not planning for property tax and insurance escalation over time. Treating closing costs as negligible when they often run 8,000-20,000 on typical purchases. Buying a home based on maximum approval amount rather than what actually fits comfortably in the budget.

Example Scenario

A $400,000 home with $80,000 down at 6.5%% over 30 years years costs $2,022.62 monthly.

Inputs

Home Price:$400,000
Down Payment:$80,000
Interest Rate:6.5%
Loan Term:30 yrs
Expected Result$2,022.62

This example uses typical values for illustration. Adjust the inputs above to match a specific situation and see how the result changes.

Sources & Methodology

Methodology

Standard amortisation formula. Monthly payment is principal times (r times (1+r)^n) divided by ((1+r)^n - 1). Monthly rate is annual rate divided by 12. Total interest is total paid minus principal. Loan-to-value is loan divided by home price. Results are estimates for illustration only and exclude property tax, insurance, and PMI.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does this include property tax and insurance?
No — only principal and interest. Total monthly housing cost typically runs 25-40% above P&I due to property tax (often escrowed monthly), homeowner insurance, HOA fees where applicable, and PMI for sub-20% down payments.
What if I put less than 20% down?
Expect PMI (private mortgage insurance) typically 0.5-1.5% of loan annually until LTV drops below 78%. On a 320,000 loan at 1% PMI, that is 267 monthly additional cost that continues for years.
Should I choose 15-year or 30-year?
15-year has 40-50% higher monthly payment but less than half the total interest. On a 400,000 loan at 6%, 15-year saves over 250,000 in interest versus 30-year. If the higher payment fits comfortably in the budget, 15-year is substantially cheaper over the life of the loan.
How much does rate really matter?
Enormously. A 0.5% rate difference on a 400,000 30-year mortgage saves about 40,000 over the loan life. Shopping rates aggressively across lenders typically finds differences of 0.25-0.5% worth thousands.

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