Down Payment Calculator
Estimate your down payment, loan amount, monthly mortgage payment, and estimated PMI for a conventional loan.
Results
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Note: PMI is estimated here for a conventional loan at a typical annual rate of 0.75% of the loan amount when the down payment is under 20%. Actual PMI varies by lender, credit score, loan type, and loan-to-value ratio. FHA, VA, and USDA loans use different insurance or guarantee rules.
🔹 Table of Contents
🔹 How This Down Payment Calculator Works
When buying a home, the down payment is one of the biggest upfront costs you'll face. This calculator helps you understand how much you need to save and what your monthly mortgage payments may look like based on your home price, down payment percentage, interest rate, loan term, property taxes, and homeowners insurance.
Whether you're a first-time homebuyer trying to figure out how much you need to save, or you're comparing different down payment scenarios to see how they affect your monthly costs, this tool gives you a clear picture of the numbers. It also estimates whether conventional PMI may apply when your down payment is less than 20% and includes a typical PMI planning estimate in the monthly total.
Quick explanation: Enter your home price, desired down payment percentage, interest rate, loan term, and estimated annual taxes/insurance. The calculator computes your down payment amount, loan principal, monthly principal & interest, monthly taxes & insurance, and total monthly payment—plus an estimated conventional PMI amount when applicable.
- Home Price: The purchase price of the home you're considering.
- Down Payment %: The percentage of the home price you'll pay upfront (typically 3-20%).
- Interest Rate: The annual mortgage interest rate for a fixed-rate loan.
- Loan Term: How long you'll repay the loan (usually 15 or 30 years).
- Result: Your down payment amount, monthly mortgage payment, estimated taxes and insurance, and estimated conventional PMI status.
Understanding these numbers helps you budget for your home purchase and decide what down payment makes the most financial sense. A larger down payment reduces your monthly payment and can eliminate conventional PMI, but requires more upfront cash. Use this calculator to explore different scenarios and find the balance that works for your finances.
For related calculations, see our Mortgage Calculator and Compound Interest Calculator.
🔹 Core Formulas
This calculator uses standard mortgage amortization formulas to compute monthly payments and total housing costs. When the down payment is below 20%, it also shows a typical estimated conventional PMI amount for planning purposes.
| Scenario | Formula |
|---|---|
| Down Payment Amount | Down Payment = Home Price × (Down Payment % ÷ 100) |
| Loan Principal | Loan Amount = Home Price - Down Payment |
| Monthly Principal & Interest | P × r(1+r)^n / ((1+r)^n - 1) |
| Estimated Monthly PMI (if applicable) | (Loan Amount × Annual PMI Rate) ÷ 12 |
| Total Monthly Payment | P&I + (Annual Tax ÷ 12) + (Annual Insurance ÷ 12) + Estimated PMI |
Variable explanation:
P= Loan principal (borrowed amount)r= Monthly interest rate (annual rate ÷ 12 ÷ 100)n= Total number of payments (loan term in years × 12)
| Symbol | Meaning | How to get it |
|---|---|---|
| PMI | Private Mortgage Insurance | Often required on conventional loans when the down payment is under 20%; a common planning range is about 0.5%-1.0% of the loan amount annually |
| DTI | Debt-to-Income ratio | Total monthly debts ÷ gross monthly income; lenders use this for qualification |
Important: FHA, VA, and USDA loans follow different mortgage-insurance or guarantee rules. This calculator’s PMI estimate is best treated as a conventional-loan planning estimate.
🔹 Worked Example 1
Let’s walk through a typical home purchase scenario.
Given:
- Home Price: $350,000
- Down Payment: 20%
- Interest Rate: 6.5%
- Loan Term: 30 years
- Annual Property Tax: $3,600
- Annual Home Insurance: $1,200
Step 1: Calculate the down payment amount.
$350,000 × 0.20 = $70,000
Step 2: Determine the loan principal.
$350,000 - $70,000 = $280,000
Step 3: Compute monthly principal & interest.
Monthly rate = 6.5% ÷ 12 ÷ 100 = 0.0054167
Number of payments = 30 × 12 = 360P&I ≈ $1,769.79
Step 4: Add monthly taxes and insurance.
Monthly tax = $3,600 ÷ 12 = $300
Monthly insurance = $1,200 ÷ 12 = $100
Total Monthly = $1,769.79 + $300 + $100 = $2,169.79
Because the down payment is 20% or higher, no conventional PMI is required. This is a strong conventional-loan scenario with no monthly PMI cost.
For another scenario, see Worked Example 2 below.
🔹 Worked Example 2
Now compare a lower down payment scenario to see the impact of a larger loan balance and estimated PMI.
| Input | Example 1 (20%) | Example 2 (5%) |
|---|---|---|
| Home Price | $350,000 | $350,000 |
| Down Payment % | 20% | 5% |
| Interest Rate | 6.5% | 6.5% |
| Loan Term | 30 years | 30 years |
| Annual Tax | $3,600 | $3,600 |
| Annual Insurance | $1,200 | $1,200 |
| Estimated Monthly PMI | $0.00 | $207.81 |
| Total Monthly | $2,169.79 | $2,709.44 |
Key difference: With only 5% down, the loan amount is $332,500 instead of $280,000. At 6.5% over 30 years, monthly principal & interest is about $2,101.63. Adding $300 monthly property tax, $100 monthly insurance, and an estimated $207.81 monthly conventional PMI cost gives a total monthly payment of about $2,709.44.
This means the lower-down-payment scenario costs about $539.65 more per month in this planning example. The exact PMI amount will vary by lender, credit score, loan type, and LTV, but this shows why a larger down payment can make a major difference in monthly affordability.
🔹 Key Factors That Affect Your Results
Several variables influence your monthly mortgage costs and total down payment required. Understanding these factors helps you make smarter decisions.
| Factor | What happens | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Down Payment Size | Larger down payment → lower monthly payment and may eliminate conventional PMI | Reduces borrowed amount, lowers monthly cost, and may save substantial money over time |
| Interest Rate | Higher rate → significantly higher monthly payment and total interest paid | Even a small rate difference can change long-term affordability; credit score and loan type affect rate |
| Loan Term | Longer term (30 yr) → lower monthly but more total interest; shorter term (15 yr) → higher monthly but less interest overall | Trade-off between monthly affordability and long-term cost |
| Property Taxes & Insurance | Higher escrow costs increase total monthly payment (principal, interest, taxes, insurance = PITI) | Tax rates vary by location; insurance depends on home value, deductible, and region |
| PMI Requirement | On many conventional loans, a down payment under 20% means PMI is added to the monthly payment; a common planning range is roughly 0.5%-1.0% of the loan amount annually | PMI protects the lender, not you. For conventional loans, you can typically request cancellation at 80% loan-to-value (LTV), and it is generally terminated automatically at 78% LTV if you are current on payments. |
Practical implications: Even a small increase in your down payment from 5% to 10% can lower your monthly payment noticeably and reduce total interest paid. Shopping for a lower interest rate or choosing a shorter loan term may also save substantial money over the life of the loan.
🔹 Real-Life Applications
This calculator is useful in many everyday financial planning scenarios, from first-time homebuyers to people comparing loan structures.
Figure out how much you need to save for a down payment and what monthly payment you can afford before you start house hunting.
See how conventional loans, FHA loans, VA loans, or USDA loans may differ in down payment requirements and monthly cost structure.
Understand your ongoing monthly housing expense so you can budget for property taxes and insurance alongside your mortgage.
Compare 15-year vs. 30-year terms to see the payment difference and long-term interest savings.
For a broader view of mortgage affordability, try our Housing Affordability Calculator (if available) or General Loan Calculator.
🔹 Planning Tips
Getting the down payment together is often one of the hardest parts of buying a home. Here are some strategies that can help.
- Tip 1: Aim for 20% if possible – Avoiding conventional PMI can save a meaningful amount each month. If you can’t reach 20%, FHA loans may allow lower down payments, but FHA mortgage insurance rules are different: for many post-2013 FHA loans, less than 10% down means annual MIP can last for the life of the loan, while 10% or more down typically means annual MIP lasts 11 years.
- Tip 2: Factor in closing costs – The down payment is not the only upfront cost. Budget an extra 2%-5% of the home price for closing fees, prepaid items, and lender charges.
- Tip 3: Check local down payment assistance programs – Many states and municipalities offer grants or loans for eligible buyers that can help reduce upfront cash needs.
- Tip 4: Don’t empty your savings – Keep an emergency fund after closing. Many buyers benefit from maintaining reserves after the purchase.
- Tip 5: Compare loan types – Conventional, FHA, VA, and USDA programs have different down payment and mortgage-insurance rules. Compare the full monthly picture, not just the upfront down payment.
Running two scenarios side by side helps show how changes in down payment percentage can affect monthly payment and long-term cost. Use this calculator to find the down payment that balances your current savings with ongoing affordability.
🔹 Summary & Key Takeaways
The Down Payment Calculator helps you estimate the upfront cash needed and ongoing monthly costs for a home purchase. By adjusting home price, down payment, interest rate, loan term, taxes, and insurance, you can explore different scenarios and get a clearer picture of affordability.
- Key point 1: A larger down payment can reduce the loan amount, lower monthly payments, and eliminate conventional PMI.
- Key point 2: Your monthly housing payment often includes principal, interest, property taxes, homeowners insurance, and possibly PMI on conventional loans with less than 20% down.
- Key point 3: Interest rate has a major impact on long-term cost, so even a small rate difference can matter.
- Key point 4: Loan term affects both monthly affordability and total interest paid over time.
Use this calculator to find a down payment and loan structure that fits your financial situation. For more mortgage tools, see our Personal Finance Calculators.
🔹 Frequently Asked Questions
A down payment is the initial cash payment you make when purchasing a home, expressed as a percentage of the home's purchase price. It reduces the amount you need to borrow from a lender.
No. Many loan programs allow lower down payments. However, on many conventional loans, putting less than 20% down usually means paying PMI, which increases the monthly cost.
Your monthly housing payment commonly includes principal, interest, property taxes, and homeowners insurance. On many conventional loans with less than 20% down, PMI may also apply. This calculator estimates each component for planning purposes.
PMI (Private Mortgage Insurance) protects the lender if you default on the loan. It is commonly required on conventional loans when your down payment is less than 20%. PMI often costs about 0.5%-1.0% of the loan amount annually, divided into monthly payments. Under the Homeowners Protection Act, you can generally request cancellation when your loan balance reaches 80% of the home’s original value, and PMI is generally terminated automatically at 78% of the original value if you are current on payments. FHA loans use a different insurance system called MIP. For many FHA loans originated after June 3, 2013, annual MIP lasts for the life of the loan if your down payment was less than 10%, and for 11 years if your down payment was 10% or more.
Sometimes. A larger down payment lowers the loan amount and monthly payment, and 20% can eliminate conventional PMI. But you should also consider emergency savings, other debts, and your broader financial goals before committing extra cash to the down payment.
🔹 References & Sources
Formulas and guidance sourced from reputable financial and mortgage authority sites.
| Source | Used For | Link |
|---|---|---|
| Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) | Mortgage payment basics and PMI cancellation guidance | CFPB |
| U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) | FHA mortgage insurance guidance | HUD |
| Investopedia | Definitions of PMI, down payments, and mortgage concepts | Investopedia |