Written by Jere Salmisto·Reviewed by CalcFi Editorial·Last verified: 2026-05-13
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HomeMortgage & Real EstateMortgage Payoff Calculator — How Fast Can You Pay Off?

Mortgage Payoff Calculator — How Fast Can You Pay Off?

30-yr mortgage6.53%· FRED · Updated May 28, 2026

See how extra monthly principal payments shrink your mortgage term and cut total interest.

Auto-updated June 3, 2026 · Verified daily against IRS, Fed & Treasury sources

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Mortgage Payoff Calculator — How Fast Can You Pay Off?

Enter your numbers below

6.82%
212
30y
540

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Interest Saved
$111,784

Payoff accelerated by 7.1 years

Base Monthly Payment$1,960
New Monthly Payment (w/ extra)$2,160
Baseline Total Interest$405,519
New Total Interest$293,735
Interest Saved$111,784
Baseline Payoff30 years
New Payoff22y 11mo
Time Saved7.1 years

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Continue with Mortgage Payoff Calculator: Save Thousands in Interest

Each extra principal payment reduces the balance that future interest is calculated on, so all subsequent payments go more toward principal. Even small extras compound hugely over 30 years.

Compare your mortgage rate to expected investment return. If mortgage is 6.82% and index funds expect 7-8%, it's a wash. Paying extra gives historically reliable return; investing gives higher expected but variable return. For risk-averse, pay extra.

Most modern US mortgages do NOT have prepayment penalties (banned on QM loans by CFPB since 2014). Older loans or non-QM loans might. Check your promissory note.

Biweekly payments = 26 half-payments = 13 full monthly payments per year (1 extra). This typically shaves ~6 years off a 30-year mortgage and saves ~25% in total interest.

Published byJere Salmisto· Founder, CalcFiReviewed byCalcFi EditorialEditorial standardsMethodologyLast updated June 4, 2026

Primary sources & authoritative references

Every formula on this page traces to a federal agency, central bank, or peer-reviewed institution. We cite the rule-makers, not secondhand blogs.

  • CFPB — Owning a Home: Mortgage guidance — Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (opens in new tab)
  • FRED — Mortgage Rates category — Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis (opens in new tab)

Found an error in a formula or source? Report it →

Original loan
$350,000 at 6.30%, 30-yr
Monthly P&I
$2,167
Balance at year 10
$295,500
Cumulative interest paid
$205,500
Principal paid
$54,500

Result: ~$55k principal paid in 10 years vs $260k of payments — 21% principal ratio

Early-year mortgage payments are mostly interest. Year 1: ~85% interest / 15% principal. By year 10, it's about 60/40. Total principal built in first decade on a 30-yr loan is only 15–25% of the original balance. This surprises most homeowners.

Current balance (yr 7)
$315,000
Remaining on original 30
23 years
Refi to 15-yr at 6.05%
New P&I $2,663/mo (vs current $2,167)
Extra monthly cost
$496

Result: Pays off in year 22 vs year 30 — saves ~$85k interest

Shortening the term is mathematically better than extra principal at similar monthly totals because 15-yr rates price 0.25–0.50% lower. But it's inflexible — you can't skip the higher payment if cash flow tightens. Alternative: keep 30-yr term, apply $496/mo extra principal voluntarily.

Remaining balance at retirement
$65,000
Remaining years
6
Age 62 option
Pay off with taxable brokerage
Opportunity cost (7% expected return)
~$4,500/yr

Result: Paying off reduces monthly obligation by $1,150/mo — lowers retirement income needs

Math says keep the 5% mortgage and invest at 7%. Psychology and retirement planning say pay off — lower fixed obligations de-risk retirement income. Monte Carlo simulations show retirees with paid-off homes have 10–20% higher sustainable withdrawal rates. Many financial planners recommend paying off by retirement despite the spread.

Most conforming loans have none, but some non-QM and older subprime loans charge 1–3% prepayment penalties. Read your note.

Impact: A 2% penalty on $200k remaining = $4,000 surprise fee.

Keep 3–6 months expenses liquid and maintain 401(k) match at minimum. Mortgage payoff is a low-priority asset allocation vs emergency liquidity.

Impact: Forgoing 401(k) employer match to pay off mortgage = losing 25–100% historically reliable return (the match itself).

Selling $100k of stock with $40k capital gain = $6–$8k federal + state tax. Net you have $92k to pay off, not $100k. Model after-tax amounts.

Impact: Expecting to pay off $100k and finding you have $92k can leave $8k residual mortgage + tax surprise.

Calculations are for educational purposes only. Consult a qualified financial advisor for personalized advice.