Extra payment calculator guide
Extra principal reduces the balance used to calculate future interest. The earlier it is applied, the more payment periods it can affect.
This calculator compares the scheduled loan with the same loan plus a recurring monthly principal payment.
How to use the extra payment calculator
- Enter the remaining balance: Use the current principal, not the original amount.
- Enter rate and remaining term: Match the current loan terms.
- Add repeatable extra principal: Use an amount your budget can sustain.
- Confirm servicing: Verify how the lender applies additional funds.
Formula and variables
Payment above scheduled principal and interest reduces principal after accrued interest.
Monthly interest = remaining principal × annual rate ÷ 12- Principal — Remaining balance
- Balance before future payments.
- Extra — Additional principal
- Recurring amount beyond the scheduled payment.
Worked example: recurring extra principal
A borrower adds $200 to a 30-year fixed loan payment.
- Extra
- $200 monthly
- Calculate the scheduled payment.
- Apply $200 more to principal each month.
- Recalculate interest on the lower balance.
Result: Earlier payoff and lower total interest
Actual savings depend on timing and servicing.
Understanding your results
Interest saved
Difference between scheduled and accelerated modeled interest.
Months saved
Number of scheduled payment months eliminated.
Assumptions
- Fixed rate and monthly payments.
- Extra funds are applied immediately to principal.
Limitations
- One-time payments and changing rates are excluded.
- Escrow is not part of the loan payment.
Common mistakes
- Entering the original instead of remaining balance.
- Assuming extra funds automatically reduce principal.
- Ignoring prepayment terms.
Practical use cases
Compare repayment choices
Change one assumption at a time and compare total cost as well as the monthly payment.
Plan before borrowing
Estimate the future obligation before accepting loan terms.
Planning and decision guide
Confirm principal application
Some servicers may advance a due date unless instructions specify principal reduction.
Protect liquidity
Compare guaranteed interest savings with emergency reserves and higher-priority obligations.
Recalculate from current figures
Use the latest balance and remaining term after major payments or refinancing.
Frequently asked questions
Does an extra payment reduce next month’s payment?
Usually it shortens payoff rather than changing the scheduled payment unless the loan is recast.
Is there a best time to pay extra?
Earlier principal reduction generally saves more interest, subject to loan terms.
Does this include escrow?
No. It models principal and interest only.
Can a lender charge for early payoff?
Some contracts have prepayment provisions; review your documents.
Sources and review
- Your home loan toolkit — Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Accessed 2026-07-10.
Reviewed 2026-07-10.