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Reverse Mortgage Calculator
Estimate how much a HECM reverse mortgage could pay you — the principal limit, the insurance and fees, and the cash that actually reaches you after any mortgage payoff.
Short answer
A reverse mortgage lets homeowners 62 and older borrow against their equity with no monthly payments. How much you can get is your home value (capped at the FHA limit of $1,209,750) times a factor set by the youngest borrower’s age and the expected rate — minus the 2% FHA insurance premium, the origination fee, and any existing mortgage that’s paid off first. Enter your home value, age, and rate below to estimate what reaches you.
Available to you
$194,500
Cash, credit line, or payments
Est. monthly payment
$1,258.45
Tenure payout for life
Principal limit
$213,000
42.6% of Max Claim Amount
Total closing costs
$18,500
Insurance + fees, financed
How the money breaks down
- Max Claim Amount
- $500,000
- Principal limit
- $213,000
- FHA insurance (IMIP, 2%)
- − $10,000
- Origination fee
- − $6,000
- Third-party costs
- − $2,500
- Available to you
- $194,500
Reverse mortgage calculators
Estimated reverse mortgage proceeds by age on a $500,000 home at a 6% expected rate
| Youngest age | Principal limit factor | Principal limit | Closing costs | Available to you |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 62 | 33.9% | $169,500 | $18,500 | $151,000 |
| 65 | 36.3% | $181,500 | $18,500 | $163,000 |
| 70 | 40.7% | $203,500 | $18,500 | $185,000 |
| 75 | 45.5% | $227,500 | $18,500 | $209,000 |
| 80 | 51.2% | $256,000 | $18,500 | $237,500 |
| 85 | 57.5% | $287,500 | $18,500 | $269,000 |
Max Claim Amount = home value (capped at the FHA limit of $1,209,750). Available amount is the principal limit minus the 2% FHA insurance premium, the capped origination fee, and $2,500 in third-party costs, with no existing mortgage to pay off. Principal Limit Factors are interpolated from HUD's published tables — an estimate, not a quote.
How a reverse mortgage is calculated
A HECM starts from the Max Claim Amount — your home value, capped at the FHA lending limit. Multiply it by the Principal Limit Factor for the youngest borrower’s age and the expected rate to get the principal limit: the gross amount you can borrow. From there, subtract the 2% FHA insurance premium, the capped origination fee, third-party costs, and any existing mortgage that must be paid off. What’s left is available to you as a lump sum, a growing line of credit, or a level monthly payment for life.
How we calculate this
Every number on this page comes from the FHA Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) formula, applied step by step:
- Max Claim Amount. your home's appraised value, capped at the FHA national lending limit of $1,209,750 (2025). Equity above the cap doesn't count toward the loan.
- Principal limit. Max Claim Amount × a Principal Limit Factor set by the youngest borrower's age and the expected interest rate. Older borrowers and lower rates raise the factor. The factors here are interpolated from HUD's published PLF tables.
- Closing costs. the 2% Initial Mortgage Insurance Premium (IMIP) on the Max Claim Amount, plus a HUD-capped origination fee (2% of the first $200,000 of value + 1% above, from $2,500 to $6,000), plus third-party costs. These are financed into the loan.
- Existing mortgage payoff. a reverse mortgage must be first-lien, so any current mortgage is paid off from the proceeds before you receive anything.
- Available to you. principal limit minus closing costs minus the mortgage payoff. You can take it as a lump sum, a growing line of credit, or a level monthly 'tenure' payment estimated by spreading the amount to age 100.
Assumptions
- FHA HECM only — proprietary 'jumbo' reverse mortgages use different limits and factors not modeled here.
- Principal Limit Factors are interpolated from HUD tables; the exact factor is fixed by the expected rate set at closing.
- Third-party closing costs are an estimate and vary by lender and state; IMIP and the origination-fee cap are set by HUD.
- The tenure payment spreads available proceeds to age 100 and does not model the growing credit line — an estimate, not a lender quote.
- Educational estimates only, not a loan offer or financial advice. HUD-approved counseling is required before a HECM.
Sources
Last reviewed: July 19, 2026
Frequently asked questions
How much can I get from a reverse mortgage?+
Your borrowing power is the Max Claim Amount (your home value, capped at the FHA limit of $1,209,750) multiplied by a Principal Limit Factor set by the youngest borrower's age and the expected interest rate. Older borrowers and lower rates get a higher factor. From that principal limit you subtract the mortgage insurance premium, origination fee, and any existing mortgage that must be paid off. This calculator estimates each step so you see what actually reaches you.
How does age affect a reverse mortgage?+
The older the youngest borrower, the more you can borrow. HUD's Principal Limit Factor rises with age because the loan is expected to run for fewer years. A 62-year-old might access around 40% of the home value at today's rates, while an 80-year-old could access well over 50%. Both borrowers on the loan must be counted, and the factor uses the younger one's age.
Do I have to pay off my existing mortgage first?+
Yes. A reverse mortgage must be in first-lien position, so any existing mortgage or home-equity loan is paid off from the proceeds at closing. What's left after that payoff — and after closing costs — is what you can take as cash, a line of credit, or monthly payments. If your current mortgage is larger than the available proceeds, you'd need to bring cash to closing to qualify.
What are the costs of a reverse mortgage?+
The main upfront cost is the Initial Mortgage Insurance Premium (IMIP), 2% of the Max Claim Amount, paid to FHA. On top of that is a HUD-capped origination fee (2% of the first $200,000 of value plus 1% above, from $2,500 up to $6,000) and third-party costs like appraisal, title, and recording. These are usually financed into the loan, which is why the amount you receive is lower than the gross principal limit.
What is a HECM?+
A HECM (Home Equity Conversion Mortgage) is the reverse mortgage insured by the Federal Housing Administration — the only federally-backed reverse mortgage and by far the most common. It's for homeowners 62 and older, requires HUD-approved counseling, and carries FHA mortgage insurance that guarantees you'll never owe more than the home is worth when the loan is repaid.
Can I receive a reverse mortgage as monthly payments?+
Yes. Instead of a lump sum you can take a 'tenure' payment — a level amount paid every month for as long as you live in the home — or a 'term' payment for a fixed number of years, or a line of credit, or any combination. This calculator estimates the tenure payment by spreading your available proceeds to age 100 at the note rate. The lender sets the exact figure.
Are reverse mortgage figures on this page exact?+
No — they're planning estimates. The Principal Limit Factor here is interpolated from HUD's published tables, and the true factor is fixed from the expected rate set at closing. Third-party closing costs vary by lender and state. Use this to understand the ballpark and the moving parts, then get an official quote and required HUD counseling before deciding.
Related tools
This tool provides planning estimates only and is not financial advice, a loan offer, or a commitment to lend. Principal Limit Factors are interpolated from HUD tables; the exact figure is set by your lender from the expected rate at closing, and third-party costs vary. A HECM requires HUD-approved counseling. Your lender’s figures govern.