Mortgage Payoff Calculator: Save on Interest & Pay Off Your Loan Early
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🏡 Mortgage Payoff Calculator

See exactly how making extra payments can shorten your loan term and save you thousands in interest.

Step 1: Current Loan Details

Step 2: Accelerated Payment Options

What is the Mortgage Payoff Calculator?

This calculator is a powerful financial tool designed to model the impact of accelerated debt repayment on your mortgage loan. It allows you to compare your current, standard amortization schedule against a modified one where you make extra principal payments.

Why You Need This Tool and Its Purpose

The primary goal of the Mortgage Payoff Calculator is to demonstrate two key benefits of making extra payments:

  1. **Massive Interest Savings:** Mortgage interest is calculated on the remaining principal balance. By paying down the principal faster, you reduce the base amount on which future interest is charged, saving you tens of thousands of dollars over the life of the loan.
  2. **Shorter Term:** The loan is paid off years sooner than the original schedule, helping you achieve financial freedom faster.
Use this tool to determine the exact extra payment amount needed to meet a specific payoff goal or to quantify the financial impact of a monthly budget change.

How This Calculator Works

The calculation is performed in two phases:

  1. **Baseline Calculation:** First, the tool calculates your **Original Monthly Payment** and the **Total Interest** you would pay over the full remaining term based on your current balance, rate, and term.
  2. **Accelerated Payoff Simulation:** The calculator then runs a new amortization schedule month-by-month, incorporating any **Extra Monthly Payments**, **Lump Sum Payments**, or the equivalent of **Bi-Weekly Payments** (which results in 13 payments per year). It stops when the principal balance reaches zero and reports the new term, new payoff date, and the total interest saved.
**Note:** All calculations are based on Principal and Interest (P&I) only and do not include taxes, insurance, or other escrow items. Always verify payoff strategies with your lender.