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Finance9 min readFebruary 1, 2025

How to Use a Mortgage Calculator: Monthly Payments, Total Cost & Amortization

Step-by-step guide to understanding mortgage calculations. Learn what affects your monthly payment, how to read an amortization schedule, and strategies to pay off your mortgage faster.

How to Use a Mortgage Calculator: Monthly Payments, Total Cost & Amortization

Buying a home is likely the largest financial decision you'll make. A mortgage calculator takes the guesswork out — this guide explains every number it produces and what to do with that information.

The Monthly Payment Formula

The standard mortgage payment formula calculates a fixed monthly payment that pays off the loan completely over the term:

M = P × (r(1+r)^n) / ((1+r)^n - 1)

Where:

  • M = monthly payment
  • P = loan principal (amount borrowed)
  • r = monthly interest rate (annual rate ÷ 12)
  • n = total number of payments (years × 12)

Worked Example

Scenario: $350,000 loan, 6.5% annual interest, 30-year term.

Monthly rate: r = 6.5% ÷ 12 = 0.5417% = 0.005417

Total payments: n = 30 × 12 = 360

M = 350000 × \frac0.005417 × (1.005417)^(360)(1.005417)^(360) - 1 = $2,212.24

Total paid over 30 years: $2,212.24 × 360 = $796,406

Total interest paid: $796,406 − $350,000 = $446,406 — more than the original loan.

Understanding the Amortization Schedule

An amortization schedule shows how each payment is split between principal and interest over the life of the loan. The pattern is striking:

| Month | Payment | Interest | Principal | Balance | |-------|---------|----------|-----------|---------| | 1 | $2,212 | $1,896 | $316 | $349,684 | | 12 | $2,212 | $1,878 | $334 | $345,717 | | 60 | $2,212 | $1,783 | $429 | $326,657 | | 180 | $2,212 | $1,471 | $741 | $270,071 | | 300 | $2,212 | $779 | $1,433 | $141,966 | | 360 | $2,212 | $12 | $2,200 | $0 |

Key insight: In month 1, only $316 of your $2,212 payment reduces the debt. The other $1,896 is pure interest. It takes until roughly month 252 (year 21) before more than half of each payment goes to principal.

What Affects Your Monthly Payment

Interest rate has the biggest impact. On a $350,000 loan at 30 years:

| Rate | Monthly Payment | Total Interest | |------|----------------|----------------| | 4.0% | $1,671 | $251,543 | | 5.5% | $1,987 | $364,813 | | 6.5% | $2,212 | $446,406 | | 7.5% | $2,447 | $531,052 | | 8.0% | $2,568 | $574,588 |

A 2% difference in rate costs an extra $280/month and $280,000 in total interest.

Loan term trades monthly payment size for total cost:

| Term | Monthly Payment | Total Interest | |------|----------------|----------------| | 15 years | $3,051 | $199,148 | | 20 years | $2,613 | $277,120 | | 30 years | $2,212 | $446,406 |

The 15-year saves $247,258 in interest but costs $839 more per month.

Extra Payments: The Most Powerful Lever

Making extra principal payments dramatically reduces total interest and loan term.

**Adding $200/month extra** to the $350,000 at 6.5% example:

  • Pays off 6 years and 4 months early
  • Saves $98,467 in interest

Adding $500/month extra:

  • Pays off 10 years and 8 months early
  • Saves $168,204 in interest

The earlier in the loan you make extra payments, the more interest you save — because interest is calculated on the remaining balance.

The 28% Rule

Lenders use the "28/36 rule" to assess affordability:

  • Your mortgage payment (PITI — principal, interest, taxes, insurance) should not exceed 28% of gross monthly income
  • All debt payments combined should not exceed 36%

For a household earning $8,000/month gross:

  • Maximum mortgage payment: $8,000 × 28% = $2,240
  • Maximum all debt: $8,000 × 36% = $2,880

Points and APR

Lenders sometimes offer to lower your interest rate in exchange for "points" — upfront fees equal to 1% of the loan each.

Break-even calculation: If paying 1 point ($3,500 on a $350,000 loan) lowers your rate by 0.25%, your monthly savings are about $55. Break-even: $3,500 ÷ $55 = 63 months (5.3 years). If you plan to stay longer than 5 years, buying the point makes financial sense.

Fixed vs Adjustable Rate

Fixed rate: Payment never changes. Better for long-term stability, especially in low-rate environments.

Adjustable rate (ARM): Typically lower initial rate, then adjusts periodically based on a market index. An ARM makes sense if you're confident you'll sell or refinance before the adjustment period.

Calculate Your Mortgage Now

Our mortgage calculator shows your monthly payment, full amortization schedule with month-by-month breakdown, and how extra payments affect your payoff date and total interest — all instantly.

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