Adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) calculator

Adjustable-rate mortgages start with a lower rate than a 30-year fixed — but once the fixed period ends, your payment changes. See your initial and adjusted payment side by side, model the difference, and decide if an ARM is the right move for your situation.

HomeExpertly
www.homeexpertly.com

Adjustable-Rate Mortgage (ARM) Calculator (USA)

Model initial and adjusted ARM payments, see the full amortization across both rate periods, and download a professional PDF report.

For estimation purposes only. ARM rates adjust based on an index (e.g. SOFR) plus a margin — actual future rates are unknown. This calculator models a single rate change at the fixed-period end. Consult a licensed mortgage professional.
1 Loan details
%
3%30%60%
yrs
102030
yrs
1715
%
2%7%12%
● Fixed — rate stays the same during fixed period
%
2%8.5%15%
▲ Adjustable — estimate worst-case or lender cap
2 Monthly costs
Initial monthly payment
--
Enter loan details and click Calculate
Monthly payment breakdown
Initial P&I --
Adjusted P&I --
Property tax --
Homeowners insurance --
HOA dues --
Loan amount --
Loan summary
Initial payment/mo --
Adjusted payment/mo --
Fixed period --
Rate adjusts --
Est. total interest --
Payment increase --
Charts
Loan balance over time
Principal vs interest

Highlighted rows indicate the adjusted-rate period. Actual future rates depend on index movements and lender caps.

How to Use the ARM Calculator

In under two minutes you’ll have a complete picture of your ARM — the initial payment, the adjusted payment after the rate resets, and the full amortization across both rate periods.


Enter Home Price & Down Payment

Input your home price and down payment amount or percentage. The loan amount is calculated automatically. Use the range slider to quickly explore different down payment scenarios and see how they affect both payment phases.

Set Your ARM Structure & Rates

Choose the full loan term (typically 30 years), the fixed period (3, 5, 7, or 10 years), and enter both the initial rate and the anticipated adjusted rate. For a realistic worst-case, add your loan’s lifetime cap to the initial rate and enter that as the adjusted rate.

Add Monthly Costs

Enter your annual property tax, homeowners insurance, and any HOA dues. These are added to both the initial and adjusted P&I payment to give you the full monthly cash-flow picture for each phase — not just the principal and interest portion.

Review Both Scenarios & Download PDF

The results panel shows your initial and adjusted payments, the exact payment increase, and a full year-by-year amortization table with the two rate periods clearly distinguished. Download the 2-page PDF report to share with your lender, realtor, or financial advisor.

What This Calculator Shows You

Most ARM tools only show you the initial payment. This one shows you both phases — initial and adjusted — including the full two-rate amortization, so you understand the entire cost of the loan before you sign.


Initial Monthly Payment

Your full monthly cost during the fixed period — principal & interest at the initial rate, plus property tax, insurance, and HOA. This is the number you’ll budget against for the first 3, 5, 7, or 10 years of the loan.

Adjusted Monthly Payment

The full monthly cost after the rate resets — P&I recalculated on the remaining loan balance at the adjusted rate, over the remaining term. This is the number that determines whether you can comfortably stay in the home after the fixed period ends.

Rate & Payment Comparison Bars

Proportion bars showing the initial rate versus adjusted rate and the initial P&I versus adjusted P&I side by side. The visual makes the payment jump immediately tangible — not just a number, but a clear before-and-after contrast.

Two-Phase Amortization Schedule

A full year-by-year table covering the entire loan term, with adjusted-rate years highlighted so you can clearly see where the rate resets. Tracks annual payment totals, principal paid, interest paid, and remaining balance for every year.

Balance at Rate Adjustment

The exact remaining loan balance when the rate resets — a critical figure for understanding how much principal you’ve actually paid off before the adjusted rate takes over. A higher balance at reset means a larger payment increase.

2-Page PDF Report

Page 1 covers loan details, rate and payment comparison bars, and 6 summary cards including payment increase. Page 2 is the full yearly amortization schedule with adjusted-rate rows highlighted in red. Ready to download and share with your lender or broker.

The ARM Market in Numbers

5/1
Most popular ARM structure — 5-year fixed, then annual adjustments
0.5–1%
Typical initial rate discount of an ARM below a 30-year fixed mortgage
$250+
Estimated monthly savings during the fixed period on a $500K 5/1 ARM vs fixed
5–6%
Typical lifetime rate cap above the initial rate on most conventional ARMs
7 yrs
Median time U.S. homeowners stay in a home before selling or refinancing

Three Borrowers Who Should Run This Calculator

An ARM isn’t right for everyone — but for the right borrower, the initial rate savings are substantial. These three profiles illustrate when an ARM makes sense and what to watch out for.


The Short-Term Homeowner
ARM risk is nearly zero

You’re buying a home you expect to sell in 4–6 years — a starter home, a relocation property, or a stepping-stone before your forever home. A 7/1 ARM lets you lock in a lower rate for 7 years and sell before the rate ever adjusts. The initial savings versus a 30-year fixed can be $15,000–$20,000 over the hold period, with no rate-adjustment risk at all.

  • Choose a fixed period that comfortably exceeds your planned hold — a 7/1 for a 5-year plan, not a 5/1
  • Use the calculator to quantify the total savings versus a 30-year fixed over your actual hold period
  • Keep a refinance option open if your timeline extends — rates may work in your favour
The Rate Watcher
Betting on a rate environment shift

You believe market rates will be lower by the time your fixed period ends — or you plan to refinance into a fixed rate before the first adjustment. An ARM lets you benefit from today’s lower initial rate without committing to it forever. The key is having a clear plan and the financial flexibility to refinance on your terms, not the market’s.

  • Model the adjusted payment at current market rates using the calculator — always plan for rates not falling
  • Confirm you qualify to refinance: check your equity position at the rate adjustment date using the balance figure
  • Factor refinancing costs ($3,000–$6,000) into the break-even when comparing ARM vs fixed
The Payment-Sensitive Buyer
Lower initial payment, plan for the reset

The 30-year fixed rate is stretching your budget but an ARM’s initial rate makes the home affordable today — and you expect your income to grow significantly before the first adjustment. This is a valid strategy, but the adjusted payment must be fully stress-tested. Enter a worst-case adjusted rate (initial rate plus your lifetime cap) and confirm you can absorb that payment before committing.

  • Run the calculator with the worst-case adjusted rate (initial rate + lifetime cap) and confirm it’s survivable
  • Don’t rely solely on income growth — model the adjusted payment on your current income as a floor
  • Build an emergency fund covering 6 months of the adjusted payment before the rate resets

7 Things Every ARM Borrower Should Know

An ARM is a powerful tool when used deliberately. These tips will help you model it accurately, protect yourself against rate risk, and make an informed decision against a fixed-rate alternative.


Always Model the Worst-Case Adjusted Rate, Not Just the Expected One

Your ARM disclosure will specify a lifetime cap — typically 5% or 6% above the initial rate. Add that cap to your start rate and enter that number as the adjusted rate in this calculator. If you can comfortably afford the resulting payment, the ARM is low-risk. If it stretches your budget dangerously, a fixed rate may be the safer choice regardless of expected rates.

The Fixed Period Should Be Longer Than Your Planned Hold

If you plan to sell or refinance in 5 years, choose a 7/1 ARM — not a 5/1. The one or two extra years of fixed-rate protection ensure that a delayed move or an unexpected extension doesn’t expose you to rate adjustments. The rate premium between a 5/1 and 7/1 ARM is typically small; the additional security is worth it.

Understand the Balance at Adjustment — It Determines Your Payment Jump

On a 30-year ARM, the loan balance at the end of a 5-year fixed period is still approximately 91% of the original loan amount. The adjusted P&I is calculated on that remaining balance over the remaining 25 years. Use this calculator’s “balance at adjustment” figure to understand exactly how large a balance the new rate will be applied to, and therefore how sensitive your payment is to rate changes.

Ask Your Lender for All Three Cap Numbers Before Applying

Every ARM has three caps: the initial adjustment cap (typically 2% or 5% at first reset), the periodic cap (typically 1%–2% per subsequent adjustment), and the lifetime cap (typically 5%–6% over the start rate). These determine exactly how bad the worst case can get. If your lender won’t provide all three in writing, that’s a red flag. Request them in the Loan Estimate.

Compare the ARM to a 30-Year Fixed on Total Cost Over Your Hold Period

The fair comparison between an ARM and a fixed isn’t the monthly payment — it’s the total interest paid over the period you actually plan to stay. Run both loan types through a calculator for your specific hold period. The ARM’s lower initial rate often wins on total cost for holds under 7 years, especially if the adjusted rate never comes into play because you sell first.

Keep Equity — Don’t Let a Low ARM Rate Tempt You Into a Higher-Priced Home

A common ARM mistake is using the lower initial payment to justify buying a more expensive home than you’d otherwise afford at a fixed rate. If the adjusted payment on that more expensive home is unmanageable, you’ve created a financial trap. Use the ARM rate savings to build equity faster or reduce financial stress — not to buy more house.

Download the PDF and Bring It to Every Lender Conversation

The 2-page PDF report breaks down both payment scenarios, the rate comparison, and the full amortization schedule with adjusted-rate rows clearly highlighted. Bringing this to a lender conversation demonstrates you understand the product fully — and puts you in a position to ask specific, informed questions about caps, index, and margin rather than relying on the lender’s summary.

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about how adjustable-rate mortgages work, how this calculator models them, and how to interpret both payment scenarios.


An ARM has two phases. During the fixed period — typically 3, 5, 7, or 10 years — the interest rate and monthly payment are locked. After the fixed period, the rate resets periodically (usually every 6 or 12 months) based on a market index plus the lender’s margin. Rate caps limit how much the rate can change at any single adjustment and over the life of the loan. ARMs typically start below 30-year fixed rates, making them cost-effective for borrowers who plan to sell or refinance before the rate adjusts.
In a 5/1 ARM, the first number (5) is the fixed period in years — the rate is locked for 5 years. The second number (1) is the adjustment frequency after the fixed period — the rate can change once per year. Common structures include the 3/1, 5/1, 7/1, and 10/1 ARM. A 7/6 ARM has a 7-year fixed period with adjustments every 6 months. In this calculator, enter your fixed period in the “Fixed period” field and the full loan term in the “Loan term” field.
The adjusted rate = index + margin, subject to rate caps. The index is typically SOFR (Secured Overnight Financing Rate) or the 1-year CMT. The margin is a fixed spread set by the lender at origination, commonly 2.25%–3.5%. At each adjustment, the new rate is calculated and then capped by the periodic and lifetime caps. This calculator lets you input the adjusted rate directly — enter the index rate at the time of adjustment plus your lender’s margin, or use the fully-indexed rate from your loan disclosure.
Rate caps limit how much your ARM rate can increase. There are three types: the initial adjustment cap (maximum at first reset — commonly 2% or 5%), the periodic cap (maximum per subsequent adjustment — typically 1%–2%), and the lifetime cap (maximum total increase over the start rate — most commonly 5%–6%). For example, a 5/1 ARM at 5.5% with a 2/2/5 cap structure can rise to no more than 7.5% at first reset, change by no more than 2% per year after that, and never exceed 10.5% over the life of the loan. Always enter your worst-case adjusted rate in this calculator.
ARMs carry payment uncertainty risk that fixed-rate mortgages don’t. After the fixed period, your payment can rise substantially if market rates have increased. The risk is manageable if you understand your caps, stress-test the worst-case payment with this calculator, and have a clear exit plan. ARMs are lower-risk when: your hold period is shorter than the fixed period, you have strong income growth, or you have meaningful equity to refinance. They’re higher-risk for borrowers who intend to stay long-term or cannot absorb a significant payment increase.
An ARM typically wins when: (1) your hold period is shorter than the fixed period — you capture the savings and sell before any adjustment; (2) you expect market rates to fall before the reset, meaning your adjusted payment could actually be lower than today’s fixed rate; or (3) the initial rate savings are substantial enough that even with a higher adjusted payment later, the ARM’s total cost over your hold period is lower. Use this calculator alongside a fixed-rate mortgage calculator to run the comparison on total cost, not just monthly payment.
The increase depends on two things: the size of the rate adjustment and the remaining loan balance at reset. As a rough guide, each 1% rate increase on a $400,000 remaining balance adds approximately $240/month to P&I. A 2% jump would add ~$480/month. This calculator shows the exact figure — the “Payment increase” card in the summary displays the precise dollar difference between initial and adjusted P&I. Use this number, not just a vague sense of risk, when deciding whether to proceed with an ARM.

Disclaimer: All results produced by the ARM Mortgage Calculator are estimates for educational and planning purposes only. This calculator models a single rate adjustment at the end of the fixed period using the adjusted rate you provide. It does not model subsequent annual adjustments, periodic caps, teaser-rate structures, interest-only periods, or payment caps. The actual payment on your ARM after the fixed period will depend on the published index value, your lender’s margin, and the applicable rate caps at the time of each adjustment. Results may differ materially from actual loan performance depending on market conditions. Always review your official Loan Estimate and Note disclosure and consult a licensed mortgage professional before making any financing decision.

Explore More Free Home Loan Calculators

25 Calculators

From your first mortgage payment to your final payoff date, our free loan calculators cover every number that matters. Whether you're comparing fixed vs adjustable rates, deciding if refinancing makes sense, calculating the true cost of an interest-only or balloon loan, or modeling extra payments — you'll find the right tool here.

Loan Payment Calculator
Plan your financial future with confidence using this interactive Investment and Growth Calculator. By entering your initial deposit, regular contributions,…
Mortgage APR Calculator
Two lenders can quote the same interest rate but charge wildly different fees, making one loan thousands of dollars more…
Jumbo Loan Calculator
Jumbo loans carry different rules, rates, and long-term costs than conventional mortgages. This calculator breaks down your full monthly payment…
Interest-Only Mortgage Calculator
Interest-only mortgages start with lower payments — but when the IO period ends and principal repayment begins, the payment jumps…
Mortgage Payoff Date Calculator
Enter your loan balance, interest rate, and any extra monthly payment — and instantly see your payoff date, total interest…
Mortgage Points Calculator
Paying points at closing to lower your rate only makes sense if you stay long enough to break even. Enter…
Mortgage Calculator
Whether you’re buying your first home in Austin, upgrading in Atlanta, or refinancing in Chicago — get an accurate monthly…
Refinance Calculator
This free U.S. refinance calculator compares your current monthly payment to a proposed new loan side by side — showing…
Amortization Calculator
Enter your loan amount, interest rate, and term — get your exact monthly P&I payment, total interest cost, and a…
Mortgage Loan Comparison Calculator
Compare two mortgage loan options side-by-side. View monthly payments, total interest, payoff timelines, and long-term savings to choose the best…
Biweekly Mortgage Payment Calculator
Switching from monthly to biweekly payments creates one extra full payment per year — automatically. See exactly how many years…
Refinance Break-Even Calculator
Enter your current loan, new loan terms, and closing costs — get your exact monthly savings, the month and date…
Mortgage Comparison with Taxes + Insurance
See Option A vs. Option B side-by-side — monthly payment, total interest, and full PITI breakdown including property taxes, homeowners…
Mortgage Tax Deduction Calculator
Use this Mortgage Tax Deduction Calculator to see whether itemizing or taking the standard deduction saves you more on taxes.
Extra Payment vs Refinance Calculator
Stop guessing. Enter your mortgage details and get a side-by-side breakdown of total interest paid, payoff timeline, break-even point, and…
15-Year vs 30-Year Mortgage Calculator
Enter your loan amount and current rates to get a side-by-side breakdown of monthly payments, total interest paid, equity growth…
ARM Rate Cap Impact Calculator
Adjustable-rate mortgages offer lower starting payments — but your rate can legally increase far beyond what most borrowers expect. Enter…
Balloon Mortgage Calculator
A balloon mortgage means lower monthly payments now — and a large lump sum due in 5, 7, or 10…
Seller Financing Calculator
Whether you're a seller offering owner financing, a buyer negotiating a private note, or an investor building a deal from…
PMI Removal Calculator
Use this PMI Removal Calculator to see if you qualify to cancel private mortgage insurance and estimate your potential monthly…
Mortgage Recast Calculator
Use this Mortgage Recast Calculator to estimate how a lump-sum principal payment can reduce your monthly mortgage payment and total…
ARM vs Fixed Mortgage Comparison Calculator
Enter your loan details once and instantly see monthly payments, total interest costs, the cumulative break-even point, and a year-by-year…
Early Refinance vs Wait Calculator
Stop guessing. This calculator runs the math on both paths — comparing monthly savings, closing cost payback, and total net…
Mortgage Assumption Calculator
Use this Mortgage Assumption Calculator to compare assuming a seller’s low-rate mortgage against financing at current market rates.
Wrap-Around Mortgage Calculator
When your existing mortgage rate is below today's market, you can profit from the difference. Enter your underlying loan and…