Excluding
property taxes and insurance, a traditional fixed-rate
mortgage payment consist of two parts: (1) interest on the
loan and (2) payment towards the principal, or unpaid
balance of the loan.
Many people
are surprised to learn, however, that the amount you pay
towards interest and principal varies dramatically over
time. This is because mortgage loans work in such a way that
the early payments are primarily in interest, and the later
payments are primarily towards the principal.
In the
beginning... you pay interest
To help calculate monthly payments for loans based on
different interest rates, lenders long ago developed what
are known as "amortization tables." These tables also make
it fairly easy to calculate how much money of each payment
is interest, and how much goes towards the principal
balance.
For
example, let's calculate the principle and interest for the
very first monthly payment of a 30-year, $100,000 mortgage
loan at 7.5 percent interest. According to the amortization
tables, the monthly payment on this loan is fixed at
$699.21.
The first
step is to calculate the annual interest by multiplying
$100,000 x .075 (7.5 %). This equals $7,500, which we then
divide by 12 (for the number of months in a year), which
equals $625.
If you
subtract $625 from the monthly payment of $699.21, we see
that:
- $625
of the first payment is interest
- $74.21
of the first payment goes towards the principal
Next, if we
subtract $74.21 (the first principal payment) from the
$100,000 of the loan, we come up with a new unpaid principal
balance of $99,925.79. To determine the next month's
principal and interest payments, we just repeat the steps
already described.
Thus, we
now multiply the new principal balance (99,925.79) times the
interest rate (7.5%) to get an annual interest payment of
$7,494.43. Divided by 12, this equals $624.54. So during the
second month's payment:
-
$624.54 is interest
- $74.67
goes towards the principal.
Note: In
Canada, payments are compounded semi-annually instead of
monthly.
Equity
As you can see from the above example, even though you pay a
lot of interest up front, you're also slowly paying down the
overall debt. This is known as building equity. Thus, even
if you sell a house before the loan is paid in full, you
only have to pay off the unpaid principal balance--the
difference between the sales price and the unpaid principle
is your equity.
In order to
build equity faster--as well as save money on interest
payments--some homeowners choose loans with faster repayment
schedules (such as a 15-year loan).
Time
versus savings
To help illustrate how this works, consider our previous
example of a $100,000 loan at 7.5 percent interest. The
monthly payment is around $700, which over 30 years adds up
to $252,000. In other words, over the life of the loan you
would pay $152,000 just in interest.
With the
aggressive repayment schedule of a 15-year loan, however,
the monthly payment jumps to $927-for a total of $166,860
over the life of the loan. Obviously, the monthly payments
are more than they would be for a 30-year mortgage, but over
the life of the loan you would save more than $85,000 in
interest.
Bear in
mind that shorter term loans are not the right answer for
everyone, so make sure to ask your lender or real estate
agent about what loan makes the best sense for your
individual situation.