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Mortgage tips

What is a mortgage calculator — and why does it matter?

A mortgage is almost certainly the largest financial commitment you will ever make, so understanding the numbers before you sign anything is essential. A mortgage calculator takes four inputs — home price, down payment, interest rate, and loan term — and tells you exactly what your monthly payment will be, how much total interest you will pay over the life of the loan, and what the home truly costs after financing. The difference between a well-informed mortgage decision and a poorly-informed one can be worth tens of thousands of dollars.

Most first-time buyers focus almost entirely on the monthly payment, which is understandable — it has to fit in your budget today. But the monthly payment is only part of the picture. On a $400,000 home with a 30-year loan at 7%, you will pay over $558,000 in interest alone before you own the home outright. That means the total cost of the home is nearly $960,000 — more than double the purchase price. Knowing that number before you buy changes how you think about the decision.

How the monthly payment is calculated

Lenders use the standard amortization formula to calculate your monthly payment: M = P × [r(1+r)ⁿ] / [(1+r)ⁿ − 1], where P is the loan principal, r is the monthly interest rate (annual rate divided by 12), and n is the total number of payments (years × 12). This formula ensures that every payment covers both the interest accrued that month and a portion of the principal, so the loan is fully paid off at the end of the term.

In the early years of a mortgage, the vast majority of each payment goes toward interest, not principal. On a $320,000 loan at 7%, your first monthly payment of roughly $2,129 consists of about $1,867 in interest and only $263 in principal reduction. By year 20, that ratio has flipped — the same payment now applies about $1,100 to principal. This front-loading of interest is why paying extra early in your loan has such a dramatic effect on total cost.

Example: 15-year vs. 30-year on a $350,000 loan at 7%

A 30-year loan gives you a payment of about $2,329/month but costs $488,000 in total interest. A 15-year loan raises your payment to $3,146/month — $817 more — but cuts total interest to $216,000. The 15-year option saves you $272,000 in interest. Whether that trade-off is worth it depends on your cash flow and what else you would do with that $817/month.

7 things that determine how much house you can afford

30-year vs. 15-year mortgage: which is right for you?

The 30-year mortgage is by far the most popular choice in the US because of its lower monthly payment, which gives borrowers more flexibility. However, the lower payment comes at an enormous cost in interest. The 15-year mortgage costs more each month but can save hundreds of thousands of dollars over the life of the loan and builds equity at roughly twice the speed.

The right choice depends on your situation. If your income is stable and you have strong cash flow, the 15-year option is often the better financial decision — the forced savings of higher payments plus dramatically lower interest can accelerate wealth building. If you are early in your career, have other high-priority goals (retirement contributions, emergency fund), or expect income variability, the 30-year with intentional extra payments gives you flexibility without locking you into a higher minimum payment. The key insight: a 30-year mortgage does not prevent you from paying it off early. You can make 15-year-equivalent payments voluntarily and retain the option to revert to the minimum if needed.

Frequently asked questions

Most conventional loans require a minimum score of 620, but you will get significantly better rates above 740. FHA loans allow scores as low as 580 with a 3.5% down payment, or 500 with 10% down. VA loans (for veterans) have no official minimum score, though lenders typically look for 620+.
Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI) is required when your down payment is less than 20% on a conventional loan. It protects the lender — not you — if you default. PMI typically adds 0.5–1.5% of the loan amount annually to your payment. Avoid it by putting 20% down, choosing a piggyback loan (80/10/10), or using a VA or USDA loan which have no PMI requirement.
A full mortgage payment usually has four components, often called PITI: Principal (paying down the loan), Interest (the lender's fee), Taxes (property taxes escrowed monthly), and Insurance (homeowner's insurance, and PMI if applicable). The calculator above shows only P&I — add your estimated taxes and insurance for a true monthly housing cost.
A common rule of thumb is to refinance when you can reduce your rate by at least 1% and plan to stay in the home long enough to recoup closing costs (typically $3,000–$6,000). Divide the closing costs by your monthly savings to find your break-even point in months.
An amortization schedule is a month-by-month breakdown of every payment — showing exactly how much goes to interest and how much to principal. In the early years, most of your payment is interest. As time passes, the principal portion grows. You can request a full amortization schedule from any lender.
Yes, and it can save you a significant amount. Most US mortgages have no prepayment penalty. Making one extra payment per year on a 30-year loan typically cuts 4–5 years off the term and saves tens of thousands in interest. Even rounding your payment up by $100–$200/month makes a measurable difference.
Escrow is an account held by the lender where a portion of each mortgage payment is deposited to cover property taxes and homeowner's insurance when they come due. Most lenders require it, and it prevents borrowers from being caught short when large tax bills arrive.

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