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Mortgage Interest Calculator
See your monthly payment, the total interest you'll pay, and a full month-by-month amortization schedule — for any loan amount, rate, and term.
Short answer
Mortgage interest is charged each month on your remaining balance at your annual rate divided by 12. Your fixed payment covers that interest first, and the rest pays down principal — so early payments are mostly interest and later ones mostly principal. Enter your loan below to see your monthly payment, total interest, and the full amortization schedule.
Monthly payment
$1,896.20
Principal + interest
Total interest
$382,633
Total paid
$682,633
Payoff time
30 yr
Amortization schedule
| Year | Principal | Interest | Balance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $3,353 | $19,401 | $296,647 |
| 2 | $3,578 | $19,177 | $293,069 |
| 3 | $3,817 | $18,937 | $289,252 |
| 4 | $4,073 | $18,681 | $285,179 |
| 5 | $4,346 | $18,409 | $280,833 |
| 6 | $4,637 | $18,118 | $276,196 |
| 7 | $4,947 | $17,807 | $271,249 |
| 8 | $5,279 | $17,476 | $265,970 |
| 9 | $5,632 | $17,122 | $260,338 |
| 10 | $6,009 | $16,745 | $254,328 |
| 11 | $6,412 | $16,343 | $247,916 |
| 12 | $6,841 | $15,913 | $241,075 |
| 13 | $7,299 | $15,455 | $233,776 |
| 14 | $7,788 | $14,966 | $225,987 |
| 15 | $8,310 | $14,445 | $217,677 |
| 16 | $8,866 | $13,888 | $208,811 |
| 17 | $9,460 | $13,294 | $199,351 |
| 18 | $10,094 | $12,661 | $189,257 |
| 19 | $10,770 | $11,985 | $178,487 |
| 20 | $11,491 | $11,263 | $166,996 |
| 21 | $12,261 | $10,494 | $154,735 |
| 22 | $13,082 | $9,673 | $141,653 |
| 23 | $13,958 | $8,797 | $127,695 |
| 24 | $14,893 | $7,862 | $112,803 |
| 25 | $15,890 | $6,864 | $96,912 |
| 26 | $16,954 | $5,800 | $79,958 |
| 27 | $18,090 | $4,665 | $61,868 |
| 28 | $19,301 | $3,453 | $42,567 |
| 29 | $20,594 | $2,161 | $21,973 |
| 30 | $21,973 | $781 | $0 |
Related mortgage tools
Monthly payment & total interest on a $300,000 loan
| Rate | 30-yr payment | 30-yr interest | 15-yr payment | 15-yr interest |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5.00% | $1,610 | $279,767 | $2,372 | $127,029 |
| 5.50% | $1,703 | $313,212 | $2,451 | $141,225 |
| 6.00% | $1,799 | $347,515 | $2,532 | $155,683 |
| 6.50% | $1,896 | $382,633 | $2,613 | $170,398 |
| 7.00% | $1,996 | $418,527 | $2,696 | $185,367 |
| 7.50% | $2,098 | $455,152 | $2,781 | $200,587 |
Principal and interest only, computed from this page's amortization engine. Excludes property tax, homeowners insurance, PMI, and HOA dues, which lenders escrow on top of the P&I payment.
How mortgage interest and amortization work
Each month, interest equals your remaining balance times your monthly rate (annual rate ÷ 12). Your payment pays that interest first; whatever's left reduces the principal. Because the balance is largest at the start, the first years of a mortgage barely dent it — then principal accelerates as the balance shrinks. That curve is your amortization schedule, and it's why extra principal payments early on save the most interest.
How we calculate this
Every number on this page comes from the standard amortization math a lender uses — the same month-by-month calculation the tool above runs:
- Monthly payment. the fixed principal-and-interest payment is M = P·r ÷ (1 − (1 + r)⁻ⁿ), where P is the loan amount, r is the annual rate ÷ 12, and n is the number of monthly payments. At a 0% rate it's simply P ÷ n.
- Interest each month. the remaining balance times the monthly rate. Because the balance is highest at the start, early payments are mostly interest.
- Principal each month. whatever's left of the payment after interest, plus any extra you pay. Extra dollars go straight to principal and stop accruing interest for the rest of the loan.
Assumptions
- A fixed interest rate for the whole term — adjustable-rate loans (ARMs) reset and are not modeled here.
- Principal and interest only. Property tax, homeowners insurance, PMI, and HOA dues are escrowed on top and not included.
- Educational estimates, not a loan offer or financial advice — your lender's figures govern.
Sources
Last reviewed: July 17, 2026
Frequently asked questions
Related tools
How is mortgage interest calculated?+
Each month, interest is charged on your remaining balance at your annual rate divided by 12. Your fixed monthly payment covers that interest first, and whatever is left pays down principal. Because the balance is highest at the start, early payments are mostly interest; as the balance falls, more of each payment goes to principal. This calculator runs that month-by-month math and shows the full amortization schedule.
How much total interest will I pay on my mortgage?+
It depends on your loan amount, rate, and term. As a rough example, a $300,000 loan at 6.5% over 30 years costs roughly $380,000 in interest — more than the amount borrowed. A shorter term or a lower rate cuts that dramatically, and paying a little extra each month can save tens of thousands. Enter your numbers above to see your exact total interest.
What is an amortization schedule?+
An amortization schedule is a month-by-month (or year-by-year) table showing how each payment splits between interest and principal, and how your balance shrinks over time. It's the clearest way to see how little principal you pay in the early years and how the balance accelerates downward later. This tool generates a full schedule for any loan you enter.
Does paying extra each month really save that much interest?+
Yes — every extra dollar goes straight to principal, so you stop paying interest on it for the rest of the loan. On a 30-year mortgage, even $100–$200 extra a month can cut several years off the term and save tens of thousands in interest. Use the extra-payment field to see your own savings and new payoff date.
What's the difference between the interest rate and APR?+
The interest rate is what's used to calculate your monthly interest. The APR (annual percentage rate) folds in certain loan costs and fees, so it's usually a little higher and is meant to help you compare offers. This calculator works from the interest rate; use APR when comparing lenders' total cost.
How does loan term affect my payment and interest?+
A longer term (like 30 years) lowers your monthly payment but stretches interest over more years, so you pay far more total interest. A shorter term (like 15 years) raises the monthly payment but slashes total interest because the balance is paid down faster. Compare terms above to see the trade-off in both dollars and monthly cash flow.
This tool provides estimates for planning only and is not financial advice or a loan offer. It calculates principal and interest at a fixed rate and excludes property tax, homeowners insurance, PMI, and HOA dues, which lenders escrow on top of the payment. Your lender's figures govern.