Calculate Your Monthly Payment and the Balloon Payment Due at Maturity
Calculate your monthly payment and the lump-sum balloon payment due at the end of your loan term. Includes full amortization schedule, cost breakdown, and downloadable PDF report.
| # | Date | Payment | Principal | Interest | Balance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calculate to see schedule | |||||
How to Use the Balloon Mortgage Calculator
In under two minutes you’ll see your exact monthly payment, your balloon lump sum, a full amortization schedule through the balloon term, and a downloadable 2-page PDF report to share with your lender or advisor.
Enter Purchase & Loan Details
Input the home price, your down payment, and the annual interest rate. The LTV percentage updates automatically as you type — if it’s above 80%, the calculator flags that PMI may be required. Use the rate slider to quickly test scenarios at different interest rates without retyping.
Set the Balloon Structure
Enter your amortization term (typically 30 years) and the balloon due-in period (e.g., 7 years for a 7/30 loan). The Structure Preview badge updates in real time showing your exact X/Y balloon notation. Tooltip buttons next to each field explain how these two inputs interact to determine your monthly payment and balloon amount.
Add Escrow Costs & Calculate
Enter your annual property tax and homeowners insurance. These are divided by 12 and added to the monthly P&I payment to show your true total monthly obligation. Click Calculate Payment to instantly see the full results — monthly payment, balloon payment due date, breakdown bars, six summary cards, and both charts.
Review the Schedule & Download PDF
Expand the amortization accordion to see every monthly payment through the balloon term — year-end rows are highlighted blue and the final balloon payment row is highlighted amber. Download the 2-page PDF to share with your lender, financial advisor, or co-borrower. All results update instantly when you change any input.
What This Calculator Shows You
Most balloon mortgage calculators show you the monthly payment and stop there. This one shows the complete picture — exactly how large your balloon will be, how much equity you’ll build before it’s due, and a full month-by-month schedule so nothing surprises you at maturity.
Monthly Payment — P&I + Escrow
The monthly P&I payment is calculated using the full amortization schedule, then tax and insurance are added for your true total monthly obligation. Proportional breakdown bars show how each component contributes to the total, so you can see instantly how escrow costs stack against the principal and interest payment.
Balloon Payment Due at Maturity
The amber balloon card shows the exact lump sum due at the end of your balloon term, clearly labeled with the year it becomes due. Because most early payments go toward interest rather than principal, this figure is typically 88–92% of your original loan amount on a 7/30 structure — a number that surprises many first-time balloon borrowers.
Balance Drop-Off Chart
A line chart showing your loan balance at the end of each year during the balloon term. Because amortization is front-loaded with interest, the balance drops slowly in the early years — this chart makes that visually clear and shows exactly how much balance remains when the balloon comes due versus how much principal you’ve actually paid down.
Total Cost Breakdown Doughnut
A three-segment doughnut chart showing interest paid, principal paid, and the remaining balloon balance as proportions of the total loan cost. On most balloon structures, the balloon segment dominates — this visualization makes the true cost structure of a balloon loan immediately obvious in a way that a table of numbers cannot.
Month-by-Month Amortization Schedule
A full accordion table showing every monthly payment through the balloon term — payment number, date, total payment, principal, interest, and remaining balance. Year-end rows are highlighted blue for easy reference. The final balloon row is highlighted amber so you can see at a glance what’s due on the last payment and confirm it matches the balloon card.
2-Page PDF Report
Page 1 covers the balloon alert with your exact lump-sum figure, a two-column loan details table, cost breakdown with proportion bars, and six key metric summary cards. Page 2 is the complete month-by-month amortization schedule with year-end and balloon rows highlighted. Download it to present to a lender, share with a partner, or keep on file for your records.
Balloon Mortgage vs. 30-Year Fixed: Key Differences
Before choosing a balloon structure, understand exactly how it differs from a standard fixed-rate mortgage across the dimensions that matter most.
| Feature | Balloon Mortgage (7/30) | 30-Year Fixed |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly payment | Usually lower — rate often below 30-yr fixed | Higher — fully amortizes over 30 years |
| Term certainty | Only 5–10 years — balloon due at maturity | Fixed for 30 years — no maturity surprise |
| Principal paydown | Very slow — 8–12% paid by year 7 | Slow but continuous — ~12–16% by year 7 |
| Refinancing risk | High — must refinance or sell at balloon date | None — fully amortizes with no forced action |
| Interest rate | Often 0.25–0.75% below 30-yr fixed | Higher, but locked for 30 years |
| Best suited for | Investors, short-term holds, seller financing | Primary residences, long-term ownership |
| Exit strategy required | Yes — mandatory before balloon due date | No — loan self-extinguishes at 30 years |
Balloon Mortgages in Numbers
Three Borrowers Who Should Run This Calculator First
A balloon mortgage is a purpose-built tool — right for specific situations, dangerous in others. These three profiles show where balloon loans genuinely make sense, and what each type of borrower needs to watch for.
You’re buying a rental property or a fix-and-flip that you plan to sell or refinance within 5–7 years. A balloon mortgage gives you the lower monthly payment of a 30-year amortization schedule, but without locking you into a long-term rate. You intend to sell before the balloon is due, so maturity risk is manageable as long as your timeline holds. This calculator shows exactly how much equity you’ll have at sale and how much the balloon balance will be at different exit points.
- Run the calculator with different balloon terms (5, 7, 10 years) to find the structure that aligns with your intended hold period — always build in a 12-month buffer
- Check the balance drop-off chart to see how much equity you’ll have at each year if you need to sell or refinance early
- Model the refinancing cost (2–5% of remaining balance) as part of your exit strategy — it significantly impacts net return if you refinance rather than sell
The seller is willing to carry the financing directly — no bank required. Seller-financed transactions almost always use balloon structures because the seller wants regular income for a defined period but ultimately wants to be paid off. As the buyer, you get flexible underwriting and potentially a below-market rate, but you need to understand exactly what you’re agreeing to: a specific balloon amount on a specific date. This calculator helps you negotiate from an informed position and prepare your refinancing plan well in advance.
- Use the amortization table to show the seller exactly how much interest they’ll earn over the balloon term — this helps negotiate the rate and structure
- Start building your refinancing relationship with a conventional lender 12–18 months before the balloon date — don’t wait until the last moment
- Ensure the seller-finance agreement includes a reset or extension clause in case refinancing becomes difficult at maturity
A lender has offered you a 7/30 balloon at a rate 0.5% below the 30-year fixed. The lower monthly payment is attractive, but you want to understand whether the rate savings are worth the balloon risk. You need to model the true cost difference — monthly savings multiplied by the balloon term, minus the refinancing cost at maturity — to determine whether the balloon structure generates a real net benefit or just the appearance of one.
- Calculate total interest paid under the balloon (term only) versus a 30-year fixed at the higher rate — the difference is your gross saving before refinancing costs
- Subtract an estimated 2–4% refinancing cost on the balloon balance at maturity from your gross saving to get your net benefit — it’s often smaller than the rate difference suggests
- If the net benefit is less than $5,000–$10,000 over the balloon term, the simplicity and risk reduction of a 30-year fixed likely outweighs the savings
7 Things to Know Before Taking a Balloon Mortgage
A balloon mortgage is a legitimate financing tool — but it comes with risks that a 30-year fixed does not. These seven tips will help you use this calculator correctly, understand the numbers, and avoid the mistakes that have led to foreclosure for unprepared balloon borrowers.
The Balloon Is Not a Small Final Payment — It’s Almost the Entire Original Loan
Many first-time balloon borrowers are surprised to find that after 7 years of “paying down” a loan, the balloon balance is still 88–92% of the original amount. This is because amortization is front-loaded with interest — in the early years, almost nothing goes toward principal. Use the balance drop-off chart in this calculator to see exactly how much you’ll owe at maturity before you commit. If the balloon amount surprises you, the loan may not be the right structure.
Your Exit Strategy Must Be Documented and Realistic — Not Assumed
Every balloon mortgage borrower has an exit plan. The problem is that many exit plans depend on conditions outside the borrower’s control — rising property values, available refinancing, a stable job, and favorable interest rates. Document your exit strategy as if you were presenting it to a skeptical lender: how will you refinance or sell by the balloon date, what happens if rates are 2% higher, and what is your backup plan if the property is worth less than expected? If you can’t answer these questions clearly, reconsider the balloon structure.
The Rate Discount Is Real — But the Net Saving Is Smaller Than It Appears
A balloon mortgage rate of 6.25% versus a 30-year fixed at 6.75% sounds like a clear winner. But calculate the actual dollar saving: 0.5% on a $360,000 loan is $1,800/year, or $12,600 over 7 years. Subtract the refinancing cost at balloon maturity — typically 2–4% of the remaining balance, or roughly $7,000–$14,000 on a $350,000 balloon — and the net saving may be zero or even negative. Run the comparison in this calculator before deciding the balloon structure is the financially superior choice.
Begin Your Refinancing Preparation 12–18 Months Before the Balloon Date
Refinancing a balloon mortgage is not automatic — it requires qualifying for a new loan, which means credit checks, income verification, property appraisal, and full underwriting. If your credit has deteriorated, your income has changed, or property values in your area have declined, you may not qualify for refinancing at all. Starting the process 12–18 months early gives you time to improve your credit, explore multiple lenders, and have a backup plan ready — rather than discovering a problem 30 days before the balloon is due.
Always Test a Worst-Case Refinancing Rate in Your Calculations
When modeling the cost of refinancing at balloon maturity, don’t assume rates will be the same as today. Interest rates can move significantly over 5–10 years. Run your exit strategy with rates 2–3 percentage points above today’s level. If a higher refinancing rate would make the property cash-flow negative (for investment properties) or push your mortgage payment beyond what you can afford (for primary residences), the balloon structure is creating an interest-rate risk that a 30-year fixed would eliminate entirely.
Check Whether Your Balloon Loan Has a Reset Option — Many Lenders Offer One
Some balloon mortgages include a conditional reset or conversion option — the right to extend the loan at the prevailing market rate without a full refinance, subject to maintaining payment history and property condition. This does not eliminate balloon risk, but it reduces the consequences if refinancing terms are unfavorable at maturity. Ask your lender explicitly whether a reset option is available, under what conditions it can be exercised, and what the reset rate would be based on — this information belongs in your loan documents, not just verbal assurances.
Download the PDF and Review the Amortization Table Before Signing Anything
The 2-page PDF from this calculator includes the complete month-by-month amortization schedule with your balloon payment clearly highlighted in amber on the final row. Review this table with your lender, financial advisor, or attorney before signing the loan documents — verify that the balloon amount shown matches your loan agreement exactly. Any discrepancy between the calculator’s output and your loan documents should be resolved before closing. The amortization table is also useful for confirming that your lender’s figures are correct and that no fees have been incorrectly added to the principal balance.
Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know about how balloon mortgages work, how this calculator models them, and what to watch for before committing to a balloon loan structure.
For informational and educational purposes only. This calculator uses the standard mortgage amortization formula to estimate monthly payments and balloon balances. Actual loan terms, interest rates, closing costs, and balloon payment amounts will vary by lender and may differ from these estimates. This calculator does not account for PMI, HOA dues, mortgage insurance, prepayment penalties, loan origination fees, discount points, or changes in property taxes and insurance over time. Balloon mortgage calculations assume a fixed interest rate and constant monthly payments throughout the balloon term. This tool does not constitute financial, legal, or mortgage advice. Balloon mortgages carry meaningful refinancing and maturity risk. Before entering into any balloon mortgage agreement, consult a licensed mortgage professional and a qualified financial or legal advisor. All calculations are performed locally in your browser; no personal data is collected or transmitted.
