Mortgage Payoff Calculator

See how extra monthly payments or biweekly schedules can save you tens of thousands in interest and take years off your mortgage. Enter your loan details to compare payoff strategies.

Mortgage Details

$
Years left on your current mortgage
$
Additional amount applied to principal each month

Standard Payoff

Monthly P&I
$1,836
Payoff Time
27y 0m
Total Interest
$314,719
Total Paid
$594,719

Payoff Strategies Compared

StrategyMonthlyPayoffTotal InterestMonths SavedInterest Saved
Standard$1,83627y 0m$314,719
Biweekly$918 x2622y 3m$249,51357$65,207
Extra $300/mo$2,13619y 2m$209,63294$105,088

Biweekly = 26 half-payments per year, equivalent to one extra monthly payment annually ($1,836/yr extra).

Amortization Schedule (Yearly)Showing with extra payments

YearBalanceInterestPrincipalEnd BalanceCumulative Interest
1$280,000$17,975$7,652$272,348$17,975
2$272,348$17,462$8,164$264,184$35,437
3$264,184$16,915$8,711$255,472$52,352
4$255,472$16,332$9,295$246,178$68,684
5$246,178$15,710$9,917$236,261$84,394
6$236,261$15,045$10,581$225,680$99,439
7$225,680$14,337$11,290$214,390$113,776
8$214,390$13,581$12,046$202,344$127,357
9$202,344$12,774$12,853$189,491$140,131
10$189,491$11,913$13,714$175,777$152,044
11$175,777$10,995$14,632$161,146$163,039
12$161,146$10,015$15,612$145,534$173,053
13$145,534$8,969$16,657$128,876$182,023
14$128,876$7,854$17,773$111,103$189,876
15$111,103$6,663$18,963$92,140$196,540
16$92,140$5,393$20,233$71,907$201,933
17$71,907$4,038$21,588$50,318$205,971
18$50,318$2,593$23,034$27,284$208,564
19$27,284$1,050$24,577$2,707$209,614
20$2,707$18$2,707$0$209,632

Mortgage Payoff Strategies

How amortization works: In the early years of a mortgage, most of your payment goes toward interest. Over time, the split shifts and more goes toward principal. Extra payments accelerate this shift by reducing the principal balance that accrues interest.

Biweekly payments:Instead of 12 monthly payments, you make 26 half-payments per year—equivalent to 13 monthly payments. That one extra payment per year can shave 4–6 years off a 30-year mortgage. Some servicers offer this directly; otherwise, you can simply add 1/12 of your payment as extra principal each month.

Recasting vs. refinancing:A recast keeps your existing loan but re-amortizes the balance after a lump-sum principal payment, lowering your monthly payment. It costs $150–$500 (no closing costs). Refinancing replaces the entire loan—useful when rates drop significantly, but involves closing costs of 2–5% of the loan amount.

PMI and the 80% LTV Threshold

If you put less than 20% down, you’re paying Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI), typically 0.5–1% of the loan amount per year. Once your loan-to-value ratio drops below 80% (you have 20% equity), you can request PMI removal. Extra payments get you there faster—this is often the highest-ROI reason to make extra mortgage payments.

When NOT to Pay Extra

If your mortgage rate is below your expected investment return, the math favors investing the extra money instead. A 3.5% mortgage costs less than long-term stock market returns of 7–10%. But paying off a mortgage provides guaranteed return and peace of mind—there’s value in that too.

Also consider: high-interest debt (credit cards, personal loans) should be paid off before making extra mortgage payments. And maintain a 3–6 month emergency fund before accelerating mortgage payoff.