How Mortgage Interest Works

Mortgage interest is the cost you pay a lender for borrowing money. The interest portion of your payment changes every month because it is calculated from your remaining principal balance.

Amortization Basics

In a fixed-rate mortgage, the payment amount stays constant, but allocation changes over time. Early payments are mostly interest, and later payments are mostly principal. This is why long-term loans can cost much more in total interest.

Interest Calculation Example

Suppose your remaining balance is $280,000 and monthly rate is 0.5%. That month’s interest is $1,400. If your payment is $1,900, only $500 reduces principal. Next month, interest is slightly lower because balance fell.

How to Reduce Lifetime Interest

Make Extra Principal Payments

Adding even $100 monthly can shorten payoff time and reduce total interest. Test this directly on the Mortgage Calculator.

Choose a Shorter Term

15-year loans usually carry lower rates and faster principal reduction, though payments are higher.

Refinance Strategically

Refinancing can help when rates drop, but closing costs matter. Compare total cost, not just payment size.

Planning Checklist

Before finalizing a loan, compare rate scenarios, review amortization summary, and verify whether prepayment penalties apply. Good planning here can save large amounts over decades.

Run an Amortization Scenario

See how extra payments change your payoff timeline.

Calculate Mortgage Interest

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is interest higher at the beginning?

Your outstanding balance is highest at the start, so interest charges are larger.

Do extra payments always help?

Usually yes for fixed-rate loans, if they are applied to principal and there are no penalties.

Should I refinance for a lower payment?

Only after comparing total interest, fees, and expected time in the home.

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