FHA Mortgage Payment Calculator
Estimate your FHA monthly payment including P&I, property taxes, insurance, upfront MIP (UFMIP), annual FHA MIP, HOA dues, and extra principal payments. MIP duration follows official FHA rules.
| # | Date | Payment | Principal | Interest | FHA MIP | Balance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calculate to see schedule | ||||||
How to Use the FHA Mortgage Calculator
Estimating your FHA monthly payment is straightforward — but FHA loans have unique moving parts (UFMIP, annual MIP, MIP cancellation rules) that most generic calculators ignore entirely. Here’s how to get an accurate number in under two minutes.
Enter Your Home Price & FHA Down Payment
Type in the purchase price and your planned down payment. Use the slider to see your down payment as a percentage. For most FHA borrowers, the magic number is 3.5% — the minimum for credit scores 580 and above. The calculator automatically flags when you’re below that threshold and tells you whether MIP lasts for the full loan term or drops off after 11 years based on whether you’re above or below the 10% down mark.
Choose Loan Term & Enter Your Interest Rate
Select your loan term — FHA loans are most commonly 30-year fixed, though 15-year options exist. Use the rate slider or type in the APR you’ve been quoted. Because FHA loans are government-insured, rates are often competitive even for buyers with lower credit scores — but they still vary by lender. Shopping at least three lenders is especially important for FHA borrowers.
Review FHA Insurance Costs — UFMIP & Annual MIP
The calculator pre-fills the standard 1.75% UFMIP rate and 0.55% annual MIP rate for 30-year loans — you can adjust either field if you’ve been quoted different figures. The UFMIP is typically financed into your loan (not paid in cash at closing), which is why your total FHA loan amount is slightly higher than your base loan. Annual MIP is charged monthly and shown as a separate line in your breakdown.
Add Property Costs & Calculate Your Full Payment
Enter your estimated annual property taxes, homeowners insurance, monthly HOA dues (if applicable), and any extra monthly principal you’d like to pay. Click “Calculate FHA payment” to see your complete monthly breakdown, FHA loan summary, balance chart, and full amortization schedule — with a dedicated FHA MIP column that shows the month MIP drops to zero. Download the PDF to compare scenarios with your lender.
What This FHA Calculator Includes in Your Monthly Payment
FHA loans carry costs that conventional mortgages don’t — particularly the two layers of mortgage insurance. This calculator accounts for every one of them so your budget reflects what you’ll actually owe every month.
Principal & Interest (P&I) on Total FHA Loan
Because you typically finance the UFMIP into the loan, your P&I payment is calculated on a slightly higher balance than your base loan amount. The calculator shows you both the base FHA loan and the UFMIP-financed total separately so you understand exactly where each dollar goes. As with any amortized loan, early payments are mostly interest — the amortization table shows the exact month-by-month split.
FHA Upfront MIP (UFMIP) — Financed at Closing
The UFMIP is a one-time fee of 1.75% of your base loan amount, required on virtually all FHA loans. Most borrowers roll it into the loan rather than pay it upfront in cash. The calculator adds it to your loan balance and amortizes it with your regular payments — you see the UFMIP dollar amount clearly in the FHA Loan Summary so you understand exactly how much extra you’re financing.
Annual FHA MIP — Monthly Charge with Cancellation Rules
The annual MIP (currently around 0.55% per year for most 30-year loans) is divided by 12 and added to your monthly payment. This calculator applies official FHA cancellation rules: MIP lasts the full loan term if your down payment is under 10%, and 11 years if your down payment is 10% or more. The amortization table shows a dash (—) in the MIP column for every month after MIP ends, and the hero card shows your lower “after-MIP” payment.
Property Taxes
Property taxes are escrowed by your FHA lender — 1/12 of your annual bill is collected with each mortgage payment. Rates vary from under 0.3% in some states to over 2% in others. For FHA borrowers in particular, accurately entering your county’s tax rate is crucial, since lenders use the total PITI (principal, interest, taxes, insurance) payment to verify your debt-to-income ratio meets FHA guidelines.
Homeowners Insurance
FHA lenders require adequate hazard insurance as a condition of the loan — it’s escrowed monthly just like property taxes. For FHA borrowers, this is typically the same cost as for conventional buyers: $1,000–$2,500/year for most single-family homes, with higher premiums in hurricane, flood, or wildfire zones. Note that FHA does not require flood insurance unless the property is in a FEMA-designated Special Flood Hazard Area.
HOA Dues & Extra Principal Payments
FHA loans can be used for FHA-approved condos and planned communities with HOA fees. Enter monthly HOA dues to get a complete housing cost picture. The extra principal field is particularly powerful for FHA borrowers with under 10% down — extra payments can accelerate your equity buildup, potentially getting you to 20% equity faster so you can refinance into a conventional loan and eliminate MIP entirely.
Key FHA Mortgage Numbers Every Buyer Should Know
How Different FHA Borrowers Use This Calculator
FHA loans serve a wide range of U.S. buyers — but the questions each group needs answered are very different. Here’s how to get the most out of this tool for your specific situation.
First-Time Homebuyers
Most common FHA userFHA was largely designed for you. With a 3.5% minimum down payment, more flexible credit requirements, and government-backing that makes lenders more willing to approve borderline profiles, FHA is often the most accessible path to homeownership for buyers without large savings or long credit histories.
- Enter 3.5% down to see your minimum qualifying FHA payment
- Check the MIP duration card — with under 10% down, MIP lasts the full term
- Try bumping your down payment to 10% and compare the lifetime MIP cost
- Use the “after-MIP” payment to see your future lower monthly cost
- Download the PDF to discuss scenarios with your real estate agent or HUD counselor
FHA vs. Conventional Shoppers
Rate comparison buyersYour credit score is in the 620–700 range and you’re trying to decide whether FHA’s lower rate beats conventional’s cancellable PMI. The answer hinges on how long you plan to stay in the home and whether you’ll ever reach 20% equity — this calculator helps you model both paths.
- Run the FHA scenario with your quoted rate and standard MIP rates
- Open the main HomeExpertly Mortgage Calculator in another tab for the conventional scenario
- Compare total interest paid over your expected ownership horizon — not just the monthly payment
- If your score is above 700, conventional PMI is often cheaper than FHA MIP
- Factor in refinancing costs if you plan to exit FHA MIP via refi
FHA Refinancers & MIP Exit Planners
Equity buildersYou have an existing FHA loan with under 10% down and you’re planning your exit from lifetime MIP via a conventional refinance. The key question is when you’ll hit 20% equity — extra principal payments can dramatically accelerate that timeline.
- Enter your current remaining balance as “home price” and $0 down payment
- Set the loan term to your remaining term and enter your current rate
- Use the extra payment field to model accelerated equity building
- Watch the amortization table to find the month your balance hits 80% of home value
- Compare your current FHA total vs. a projected conventional refi payment
Understanding FHA Mortgage Insurance: UFMIP & Annual MIP
FHA mortgage insurance is the biggest cost differentiator between FHA and conventional loans. Understanding exactly how it works — and when it ends — is essential to making the right financing decision.
UFMIP: The Upfront Premium
At 1.75% of the base loan amount, UFMIP is due at closing but almost always financed into the loan. On a $386,000 base loan (i.e., $400,000 home with 3.5% down), UFMIP adds $6,755 — making your total FHA loan $392,755. This is why your P&I payment in this calculator is calculated on the slightly higher financed amount, not just your home price minus down payment.
Annual MIP: Monthly Insurance Charge
Annual MIP is calculated as a percentage of the outstanding loan balance and collected monthly. For most 30-year FHA loans with under 5% down, the rate is 0.55% — on a $386,000 loan, that’s about $177/month. This rate is set by HUD (not the lender), but the specific rate depends on your loan term, loan amount, and LTV. The calculator defaults to the most common scenario but lets you adjust the rate for your specific quote.
When Does FHA MIP End?
For loans originated after June 3, 2013: if your original down payment is under 10%, annual MIP lasts for the entire loan term — it never cancels automatically. If your down payment is 10% or more, MIP cancels after 11 years. This is the single most important decision FHA borrowers face, and this calculator shows you both scenarios instantly — including the lower “after-MIP” monthly payment and total MIP paid over the life of the loan.
The Refinance Path Out of MIP
For borrowers with under 10% down, refinancing into a conventional loan is the only way to eliminate FHA MIP before the loan is paid off. The optimal time to refinance is when you have roughly 20% equity and your credit score has improved enough to qualify for competitive conventional rates. Use the extra payment field in this calculator to model how quickly you can reach that equity milestone with additional principal payments each month.
7 Smart Strategies for FHA Borrowers in 2025–2026
FHA financing is powerful — but knowing how to use it strategically can save you tens of thousands over the life of your loan. These tips apply specifically to FHA borrowers in the current U.S. market.
Know the 3.5% vs. 10% Down Trade-Off Before You Close
The difference between 3.5% and 10% down on a $400,000 home is $26,000 in upfront cash. But putting 10% down means FHA MIP cancels after 11 years instead of lasting the full 30 years — potentially saving $23,000+ in cumulative MIP payments. Run both scenarios in this calculator to decide whether it’s worth saving longer to hit the 10% threshold.
Shop FHA Lenders — Rates Vary Even on Government-Backed Loans
Because FHA insurance protects the lender, borrowers often assume FHA rates are standardized. They are not. Lender margins, overlays, and pricing models vary significantly. A 0.25% rate difference on a $390,000 FHA loan means roughly $58/month and nearly $21,000 over 30 years. Use this calculator’s PDF to present a consistent scenario to every lender you approach and make comparison straightforward.
Improve Your Credit Score to 620+ Before Applying
FHA technically allows scores as low as 580 (for 3.5% down), but most lenders apply overlays requiring 620+. More importantly, moving from 580 to 660 can meaningfully improve the rate you’re offered — even on an FHA loan. Pay down revolving credit balances below 30% utilization and dispute any errors on your credit report 3–6 months before applying.
Budget for UFMIP in Your Closing Cost Planning
Even if you finance UFMIP into the loan (as most borrowers do), it still affects your numbers: it increases your loan balance, your monthly P&I, and your total interest paid over the life of the loan. The calculator shows you all three impacts clearly in the FHA Loan Summary. If you have the option to pay UFMIP in cash at closing, calculate whether the lower loan balance saves you more than the cash costs you over your expected ownership period.
Check Your County’s FHA Loan Limit Before House Hunting
FHA loan limits vary dramatically by county — from $524,225 in low-cost areas to $1,209,750 in high-cost metros in 2025. If a home’s price exceeds your county’s FHA limit, you cannot use FHA financing for the full amount. Look up your county’s limit at HUD’s website before starting your search, and build it into your budget constraints from day one.
Plan Your Exit Strategy from FHA MIP on Day One
If you’re putting less than 10% down, FHA MIP never automatically cancels. Your exit is a conventional refinance once you’ve built ~20% equity. The smartest FHA borrowers build this timeline into their financial plan from closing day — knowing what home value appreciation and extra payments they need to hit their refi target. The extra payment and amortization table in this calculator are your planning tools.
Use Extra Principal Payments to Accelerate Your Equity Timeline
Extra payments on an FHA loan do double duty: they reduce the principal balance (and thus the annual MIP charge, which is recalculated on the outstanding balance each year), and they accelerate the date you reach 20% equity for a conventional refi. Even $100–$200/month extra can move your equity milestone years earlier. Use the “Extra monthly principal” field to model exactly how much time — and MIP — you could eliminate.
How to Calculate an FHA Mortgage Payment
FHA payment math involves a few more steps than a standard mortgage. Here’s exactly how it works — the same logic this calculator uses.
Step 1: Calculate the Total FHA Loan Amount
Total FHA Loan = (Home Price − Down Payment) × (1 + UFMIP Rate)
Example: ($400,000 − $14,000) × 1.0175 = $386,000 × 1.0175 = $392,755
This total financed amount (including UFMIP) is the balance your P&I payment is calculated on — not just the purchase price minus down payment.
Step 2: Calculate Monthly P&I
M = P × [r(1+r)ⁿ] / [(1+r)ⁿ−1]
Where P = total FHA loan ($392,755), r = monthly rate (6.5% ÷ 12 = 0.5417%), n = 360 months.
Result: ≈ $2,484/month P&I — slightly higher than a conventional loan on the same home because of the financed UFMIP.
Step 3: Add Monthly FHA MIP
Monthly MIP = (Base Loan × Annual MIP Rate) ÷ 12
Example: ($386,000 × 0.55%) ÷ 12 = $2,123 ÷ 12 = ≈ $177/month
Note: MIP is calculated on the base loan (before UFMIP), not the total financed amount. This matches how HUD calculates it, and how this calculator works.
Step 4: Add All Monthly Housing Costs
Total = P&I + Monthly MIP + Monthly Tax + Monthly Insurance + HOA + Extra
Continuing our example: $2,484 P&I + $177 MIP + $300 tax + $100 insurance = $3,061/month total — the number that matters for your budget and DTI ratio. This calculator produces this figure instantly and breaks it out line by line.
FHA Mortgage Calculator FAQ
The most common questions from U.S. buyers considering FHA financing — answered plainly.
Important disclaimer: All FHA mortgage calculations provided by this tool are for educational and estimation purposes only and do not constitute financial, legal, or mortgage advice. FHA MIP rates, UFMIP rates, loan limits, and qualifying criteria are set by HUD and subject to change; always verify current rates with a licensed FHA-approved lender. Results are based on your inputs and standard U.S. FHA amortization formulas. Actual loan terms, approval, rates, and fees will vary based on your credit profile, property location, lender policies, and current market conditions. For personalized FHA guidance, consult a HUD-approved housing counselor (free referrals at 800-569-4287) or a licensed mortgage professional. HomeExpertly is not a lender, broker, or financial advisor.
