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How to Calculate Mortgage Payments Accurately

Understand every component of a mortgage payment — principal, interest, PMI, taxes, and insurance — and learn to use our mortgage calculator for precise estimates.

8 min readUpdated June 11, 2026Finance

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What Is a Mortgage Payment?

A mortgage payment is the monthly amount you pay to your lender to repay a home loan. Most people think of it as a single number, but a full mortgage payment is actually made up of four distinct components — collectively called PITI: Principal, Interest, Taxes, and Insurance. Understanding each piece helps you budget accurately and avoid surprises at closing.

  • Principal — The portion that reduces your loan balance.
  • Interest — The lender's fee for lending you money, expressed as an annual rate applied monthly.
  • Taxes — Property taxes collected monthly and held in escrow by the lender.
  • Insurance — Homeowners insurance (and PMI, if applicable) also escrowed.

The Formula

The standard formula for calculating the monthly principal-and-interest (P&I) payment on a fixed-rate mortgage is:

$$ M = P \frac{r(1+r)^n}{(1+r)^n - 1} $$

Where:

  • M = Monthly payment
  • P = Loan principal (purchase price minus down payment)
  • r = Monthly interest rate (annual rate ÷ 12)
  • n = Total number of monthly payments (loan term in years × 12)

This formula does not include taxes and insurance — those are added on top to arrive at your true monthly housing cost.

Step-by-Step Guide

Step 1: Determine Your Loan Amount

Subtract your down payment from the home's purchase price. If you're buying a $350,000 home with 10% down ($35,000), your loan principal is $315,000.

Step 2: Convert the Annual Rate to a Monthly Rate

Divide the annual interest rate by 12. At 7.25% annually, the monthly rate is:

$$ r = \frac{7.25%}{12} = 0.604167% = 0.00604167 $$

Step 3: Calculate Total Payments

For a 30-year mortgage: n = 30 × 12 = 360 payments.

Step 4: Apply the Formula

$$ M = 315{,}000 \times \frac{0.00604167(1+0.00604167)^{360}}{(1+0.00604167)^{360} - 1} $$

$(1.00604167)^{360} \approx 8.797$

$$ M = 315{,}000 \times \frac{0.00604167 \times 8.797}{8.797 - 1} = 315{,}000 \times \frac{0.05314}{7.797} \approx $2,149 $$

Your P&I payment is approximately $2,149/month.

Step 5: Add Taxes, Insurance, and PMI

Since the down payment is only 10% (LTV = 90%), Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI) is required. PMI typically costs 0.5%–1.5% of the loan annually. At 0.85%:

$$ \text{PMI} = \frac{315{,}000 \times 0.0085}{12} \approx $223/\text{month} $$

Adding estimated taxes ($350/mo) and homeowners insurance ($120/mo):

Total monthly payment ≈ $2,149 + $223 + $350 + $120 = $2,842

Real-World Example

Component Monthly Amount
Principal & Interest $2,149
Property Tax (est.) $350
Homeowners Insurance $120
PMI (10% down) $223
Total PITI $2,842

Once your loan balance drops to 80% of the original home value (LTV ≤ 80%), you can request PMI cancellation — saving $223/month. On a $315,000 loan, that typically happens after 6–7 years of regular payments.

Key Concepts

Term Definition
LTV (Loan-to-Value) Loan amount ÷ appraised home value; below 80% eliminates PMI
Fixed-Rate Mortgage Interest rate stays constant for the entire loan term
Adjustable-Rate (ARM) Rate is fixed for an initial period (e.g., 5 years), then adjusts annually
Amortization The process of gradually paying off a loan through scheduled payments
Escrow An account managed by your lender to pay taxes and insurance on your behalf
Mortgage Points Prepaid interest to buy down your rate; 1 point = 1% of the loan amount

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I choose a fixed-rate or ARM mortgage? If you plan to stay in the home for more than 7 years, a fixed-rate mortgage offers predictability. ARMs typically start with a lower rate (often 0.5%–1% less) and can save money if you move or refinance before the adjustment period begins.

How much does a rate lock cost? Most lenders offer a free 30-day rate lock at closing. Longer locks (60–90 days) may cost 0.25%–0.5% of the loan amount. Locks protect you if rates rise before you close.

Does a larger down payment always make sense? A 20% down payment eliminates PMI immediately, but tying up extra cash in home equity means missing potential investment returns. If your mortgage rate is 7.25% and you expect market returns of 8–10%, keeping the cash invested may be mathematically favorable.

What happens if I make extra payments? Extra principal payments directly reduce your loan balance, shortening the loan term and saving substantial interest. On the $315,000 loan above, an extra $200/month would cut roughly 4 years off a 30-year mortgage.

How are mortgage points calculated? One discount point costs 1% of the loan ($3,150 on a $315,000 loan) and typically reduces the rate by 0.25%. To break even, divide the point cost by the monthly savings — if a point saves $45/month, you break even in 70 months (~6 years).