This Is How Much My Actual Mortgage Costs Each Month (2024)

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Taryn Williford

Taryn Williford

Taryn is a writer, editor, content strategist, and homebody from Atlanta. I might have helped you declutter your apartment through the magic of a well-paced email newsletter. Or maybe you know me from The Pickle Factory Loft on Instagram.

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published Feb 10, 2019

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This Is How Much My Actual Mortgage Costs Each Month (1)

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Any renter with an internet connection and a passion for painting the walls dark green (or black or maybe just wallpapering a bit) can attest to the bit of confusion you feel when first encountering a mortgage calculator or payment estimator online.

You approach the thing with some very rough estimates researched in haste about what a modest little 2-bedroom in an up-and-coming neighborhood might cost. You give a not-totally-inaccurate number of what kind of down payment you might have, but, yeah, it’s inflated just a little bit. (Maybe you’ll get better at saving soon.) You have no idea even what interest rate to enter—you’ve got pretty good credit but haven’t even gotten as far in this very informal home search as to google a little bit about rates—so you use the default one in the calculator. You push the button and find that the number it spits out for your future mortgage payment on your lovely little 2-bedroom condo on the East side of the city is… well, it’s doable. Too doable, you realize. Why isn’t everybody buying a home?

Related: The 5 Most Expensive U.S. Cities for Homeowners

That number an online mortgage calculator will give you is just one piece of the full picture of what it costs, monthly, to buy a home. (This is to say nothing of the other expenses involved, like a down payment and closing costs, plus the ongoing maintenance of being king of your own domain.) The calculator is estimating just your principal and interest payment (“P&I”) based on all the factors you punched in—that’s just what you have to pay back to the bank in exchange for them loaning you more money than you’ve ever seen in your life. On top of that there’s possibly mortgage insurance (if you’re making a down payment under 20 percent), and definitely homeowner’s insurance and taxes, which are likely collected in this thing called an escrow account where your lender collects the taxes and premiums from you and pays those bills on your behalf.

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What an Actual Mortgage Payment Can Look Like

To show you how much those other expenses can add up on top of what seems like a doable number that the calculator gives you, I thought I’d share my actual mortgage, in very real numbers.

My husband and I bought a 2-bedroom loft in Atlanta last year, our first home after many years of renting both separately and together. A monthly mortgage payment involves lots of little forever-moving parts and pieces, but here is a snapshot of what our 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage payment looks like right now at almost one year in:

Principal and Interest: $1,385.87

Mortgage Insurance: $147.13 *

Monthly Escrow: $409, includes the below:

  • Insurance: $42.17
  • Property Taxes: $87.02
  • City Property Tax: $279.81

Homeowner’s Association Fees: $250 †

Total Payment Each Month: $2192

* We’ll own 20% equity in our home by November 2023, and that’s when PMI (private mortgage insurance) goes away. Until then, this is a necessary monthly expense for us.

This is technically not part of our mortgage payment, as it’s a separate bill that is paid to our loft’s association and not to our lender. But for our specific household budget, we keep this expense in the same bucket as our mortgage. If you’re thinking about the affordability of a condo, you need to factor this in, too.

Related: This Super-Common Real Estate Advice Is Totally Bogus

Principal and Interest

In a fixed-rate mortgage, your P&I payment (the figure most mortgage calculators tell you) will never change, although the proportions of it going respectively to paying the principal loan and interest will. Over the past 9 months, an average of $458 of our P&I payment has been going to our principal, and $928 to interest. That ratio will consistently move more in our favor over time—though it does take a long time. We’ll be paying our principal loan down by about $500 per month after 3 years of owning our place, and it will take 20 years until we’re paying $1,000 a month towards the original loan.

So, yes, right now only 450-ish dollars of our $2,192 monthly housing expense is money we’re not “throwing away,” to use a phrase often cited by wary renters. That 20-ish percent of our total monthly housing expense is the only part going back into our pockets in the form of home equity. The rest is interest, plus the other taxes, insurance and fees.

Everything Else

The expenses beyond P&I vary from place to place and buyer to buyer. Your mortgage insurance payment depends on your credit and the cost of your home, but you can estimate the total to be between 0.3 percent and 1.5 percent, annually, of the original loan amount. Homeowner’s insurance depends on how much you have to insure and how much coverage you need. And your property taxes just depend on where you live.

The parts of our monthly payment beyond principal and interest can (and likely will) go up over time. Maybe not as much as rent does, but still. Your housing costs as a homeowner are hardly a fixed expense.

Related: My Credit Score Was Actually 70 Points Lower Than I Thought—And Yours May Be Too

Are Mortgage Calculators Accurate?

I mean, technically, yes. They’re accurate. They’re calculators. Even in an uncertain world, you can usually trust computers about numbers. But I think that online mortgage calculators can be seriously misleading in the early stages of buying a home.

As a renter, you have one big line item on your budget: rent. Your total housing expense is a round and uncomplicated number, possibly supplemented with a small amount for renter’s insurance and utilities, depending on how you budget. When you become a homeowner, your “mortgage” (in quotes) is the sum of all of kinds of related payments you make to your lender (and maybe your HOA) each month. But the actual mortgage (no quotes) is technically just that principal and interest part, and if you just swap out your rent for the new number on the mortgage calculator in order to figure out if homeownership is possible for you, you’re doing yourself a disservice by ignoring all the other expenses you’ll be on the hook for.

In order to get a better picture of your future as a homeowner, you’ll need to do a little more legwork. Research into property taxes in the area you’re looking to buy (a real estate agent can help with this), get a quote from a homeowner’s insurance company and, if you’re putting less than 20 percent down, use a PMI calculator to estimate what mortgage insurance might cost you.

Re-edited from a post originally published 2.28.2017 – LS

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Home Financing

This Is How Much My Actual Mortgage Costs Each Month (2024)

FAQs

How much does a mortgage cost per month? ›

5 States with Highest Average Mortgage Payment
StateAverage Monthly Payment
California$3,330
Hawaii$3,222
District of Columbia$2,955
Idaho$2,527
1 more row
Dec 20, 2023

How do you calculate the actual cost of a loan? ›

To calculate how much a loan will cost you, you'll need to add up the total interest charges for the life of your loan and combine that amount with any loan fees you paid. If you didn't pay any loan fees like an origination fee, then the total cost of your loan is made up of interest charges.

How do you calculate exact mortgage payments? ›

For example, if your interest rate is 6 percent, you would divide 0.06 by 12 to get a monthly rate of 0.005. You would then multiply this number by the amount of your loan to calculate your loan payment. If your loan amount is $100,000, you would multiply $100,000 by 0.005 for a monthly payment of $500.

How much of your monthly expenses should be mortgage? ›

The 28% mortgage rule states that you should spend 28% or less of your monthly gross income on your mortgage payment (e.g., principal, interest, taxes and insurance).

How is mortgage calculated per month? ›

Lenders multiply your outstanding balance by your annual interest rate, but divide by 12 because you're making monthly payments. So if you owe $300,000 on your mortgage and your rate is 4%, you'll initially owe $1,000 in interest per month ($300,000 x 0.04 ÷ 12).

How much is a $2000 a month mortgage? ›

With $2,000 per month to spend on your mortgage payment, you are likely to qualify for a home with a purchase price between $250,000 to $300,000, said Matt Ward, a real estate agent in Nashville. Ward also points out that other financial factors will impact your home purchase budget.

How do you calculate actual cost? ›

Actual Cost Calculation

Actual material cost = (Number of units of materials) x (Price per unit) Actual labor cost = (Total labor hours used) x (Salary of direct workers per hour)

What is the actual cost amount? ›

In accounting, Actual Cost refers to the amount of money that was paid to acquire a product or asset. This could be the historical, past, or present-day cost of the product.

How do you calculate actual payment? ›

How to Calculate Monthly Loan Payments
  1. If your rate is 5.5%, divide 0.055 by 12 to calculate your monthly interest rate. ...
  2. Calculate the repayment term in months. ...
  3. Calculate the interest over the life of the loan. ...
  4. Divide the loan amount by the interest over the life of the loan to calculate your monthly payment.

How to calculate monthly payment? ›

The formula is: M = P [ i(1 + i)^n ] / [ (1 + i)^n – 1], where M is the monthly payment, P is the loan amount, i is the interest rate (divided by 12) and n is the number of monthly payments.

How to find the mortgage amount? ›

Loan amount - If you're getting a mortgage to buy a new home, you can find this number by subtracting your down payment from the home's price. If you're refinancing, this number will be the outstanding balance on your mortgage. Loan term (years) - This is the length of the mortgage you're considering.

What is the formula for the maximum monthly mortgage payment? ›

Monthly housing payment (PITI)

Maximum monthly payment (PITI) is calculated by taking the lower of these two calculations: Monthly Income X 28% = monthly PITI. Monthly Income X 36% - Other loan payments = monthly PITI.

How do I calculate how much mortgage I can afford? ›

Using a percentage of your income can help determine how much house you can afford. For example, the 28/36 rule may help you decide how much to spend on a home. The rule states that your mortgage should be no more than 28 percent of your total monthly gross income and no more than 36 percent of your total debt.

How do you calculate monthly house expenses? ›

Your total housing expense is calculated by adding up all of your monthly housing expenses, including the mortgage payments, insurance, and taxes.

How much house can I afford if I make $70,000 a year? ›

One rule of thumb is that the cost of your home should not exceed three times your income. On a salary of $70k, that would be $210,000. This is only one way to estimate your budget, however, and it assumes that you don't have a lot of other debts.

How much is a $200 000 mortgage per month? ›

As far as the simple math goes, a $200,000 home loan at a 7% interest rate on a 30-year term will give you a $1,330.60 monthly payment. That $200K monthly mortgage payment includes the principal and interest.

How much is the mortgage on a $300 000 house? ›

Monthly payments for a $300,000 mortgage
Annual Percentage Rate (APR)Monthly payment (15-year)Monthly payment (30-year)
7.25%$2,738.59$2,046.53
7.50%$2,781.04$2,097.64
7.75%$2,823.83$2,149.24
8.00%$2,866.96$2,201.29
5 more rows

Is $3,000 a high mortgage payment? ›

With rates at a 22-year high, the $3,000 monthly mortgage payment becomes the norm. In the face of spiking interest rates and historically high home prices, $3,000 monthly mortgage payments are common in today's housing market.

Is $1500 a high mortgage? ›

The 25% post-tax model says that your mortgage payment should be less than 25% of your net income. For example, if you make $6,000 after taxes, you would want to keep your mortgage payment below $1,500 following the 25% post-tax model.

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