How Loan Amortization Works
If you've ever looked at a mortgage statement and noticed that almost all of your early payments go to interest — very little reducing the actual balance — you've witnessed amortization in action. Understanding how loans amortize demystifies mortgages, car loans, and any fixed-payment debt.
What Is Amortization?
Amortization is the process of paying off a debt through regular equal payments over time. Each payment covers: 1. The interest accrued since the last payment 2. A portion of the principal (the actual debt)
The key insight: early in the loan, most of each payment is interest. As the balance decreases, the interest portion shrinks and the principal portion grows — even though the payment amount stays the same.
The Monthly Payment Formula
For a fixed-rate loan:
M = P × [r(1+r)^n] / [(1+r)^n − 1]
Where: - M = monthly payment - P = principal (loan amount) - r = monthly interest rate (annual rate ÷ 12) - n = total number of payments (years × 12)
Example: $300,000 mortgage at 7% annual interest, 30 years
- P = $300,000
- r = 0.07 ÷ 12 = 0.005833
- n = 30 × 12 = 360
M = 300,000 × [0.005833 × (1.005833)^360] / [(1.005833)^360 − 1]
= 300,000 × [0.005833 × 8.1165] / [8.1165 − 1]
= 300,000 × 0.04733 / 7.1165
= 300,000 × 0.006653
= $1,995.91 per month
How the First Payment Breaks Down
For the $300,000 mortgage above:
Month 1: - Interest = $300,000 × (7% ÷ 12) = $1,750.00 - Principal = $1,995.91 − $1,750.00 = $245.91 - Remaining balance: $300,000 − $245.91 = $299,754.09
Only $245.91 of your first $1,995.91 payment reduced the debt. $1,750.00 went to the lender as profit.
Month 2: - Interest = $299,754.09 × 0.005833 = $1,748.57 - Principal = $1,995.91 − $1,748.57 = $247.34
The principal portion grows by about $1.43 per month. After 360 payments, the loan is exactly paid off.
The Full Cost of a 30-Year Mortgage
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Loan amount | $300,000 |
| Total payments | 360 × $1,995.91 = $718,528 |
| Total interest paid | $718,528 − $300,000 = $418,528 |
| Interest as % of total paid | 58% |
You pay nearly 1.4× the loan amount in interest alone over 30 years. This is the true cost of a long-term loan.
Effect of Interest Rate on Total Cost
| Rate | Monthly payment | Total interest (30 yr) |
|---|---|---|
| 4% | $1,432 | $215,609 |
| 5% | $1,610 | $279,767 |
| 6% | $1,799 | $347,514 |
| 7% | $1,996 | $418,527 |
| 8% | $2,201 | $492,515 |
A 1% rate difference on a $300,000 mortgage costs roughly $65,000–$74,000 more over 30 years. This is why rate shopping matters.
Paying Extra: The Impact of Overpayment
One of the most powerful tools in debt management is making extra principal payments.
Same mortgage ($300,000, 7%, 30 years), paying $200 extra per month: - Original term: 360 months - New term: approximately 288 months (24 years, not 30) - Interest saved: ~$73,000
Every dollar of extra principal payment: 1. Reduces the balance immediately 2. Reduces the interest in every subsequent period 3. Shortens the loan term
Early in the loan, extra principal payments have the greatest leverage because they compound forward through the remaining years.
15-Year vs. 30-Year Mortgage
| 30-year | 15-year | |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly payment ($300k, 7%) | $1,996 | $2,696 |
| Total interest | $418,527 | $185,367 |
| Interest savings | — | $233,160 |
| Effective rate difference | — | Higher monthly cost |
The 15-year saves $233,000 in interest but costs $700/month more. Whether this makes financial sense depends on your alternative uses for that $700 (investing vs. debt reduction).
ARM vs. Fixed-Rate Loans
Fixed-rate loans have the same interest rate for the entire term. Monthly payments are predictable. The formula above applies exactly.
Adjustable-rate mortgages (ARM) start with a fixed rate for a period (3, 5, or 7 years), then reset periodically based on a market index (typically SOFR + a margin):
- 5/1 ARM: Fixed for 5 years, then adjusts annually
- At each reset, the new rate applies to the remaining balance with a new payment calculation
ARMs carry interest rate risk. If rates rise significantly at reset, the payment can jump substantially.
Calculate loan payments and see the full amortization schedule: Loan Calculator →
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