Interest-Only Mortgage Calculator

Interest-only mortgages start with lower payments — but when the IO period ends and principal repayment begins, the payment jumps significantly. See both phases side by side, understand the payment increase, and get the full cost picture before you commit.

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Interest-Only Mortgage Calculator

See your interest-only payment, the jump when full amortization starts, total interest cost, and download a 2-page PDF report.

Estimates only — not financial advice. Consult a licensed mortgage professional before making any financing decision.
Loan Details
$
$
3%50%
yrs
1030
%
1%20%
IO Period & Costs
yrs
120
Must be shorter than the loan term
$
$
Interest-Only Monthly Payment
Enter your details and click Calculate
YearAnnual PaymentPrincipalInterestEnd Balance

How to Use the Interest-Only Calculator

In under two minutes you’ll see your exact IO payment, the amortizing payment after the IO period ends, the payment jump between the two phases, and the full year-by-year amortization schedule.


Enter Home Price & Down Payment

Input your home price and down payment amount or percentage. Your loan amount is calculated automatically. Use the range sliders to quickly test different down payment scenarios and see how loan size affects both the IO and amortizing payment phases.

Set Loan Term, IO Period & Rate

Choose the total loan term (typically 30 years) and the interest-only period (3–10 years). Enter your interest rate — the same rate applies to both phases. The amortization period is calculated automatically as loan term minus the IO period, and the amortizing payment is computed on the full original balance over that shorter remaining window.

Add Property Tax, Insurance & HOA

Enter your annual property tax, homeowners insurance, and any HOA dues. These are included in both the IO and amortizing total payment figures so you can see the full monthly cash-flow impact — not just the principal and interest component — across both phases.

Review Both Phases & Download PDF

The results panel shows IO and amortizing payments side by side with proportion bars, the exact dollar increase when amortization begins, total interest by phase, and a full amortization table with IO rows clearly marked. Download the 2-page PDF to share with a lender, financial advisor, or co-borrower.

What This Calculator Shows You

Most mortgage calculators ignore the IO-to-amortization transition entirely. This one puts both phases on screen simultaneously so you can see the full picture — including the payment jump, the interest cost split, and the exact amortization schedule across both periods.


Interest-Only Monthly Payment

Your full monthly cost during the IO period — pure interest plus property tax, insurance, and HOA. This is the lower payment you’ll budget against for the first 3 to 10 years of the loan, and the figure most lenders use to qualify you for the mortgage.

Amortizing Monthly Payment

The full monthly cost after the IO period ends — P&I recalculated on the full original balance over the remaining loan years, plus your fixed monthly costs. This is the number you must be able to absorb long-term if you keep the loan into the amortization phase.

Phase Comparison Bars

Proportional bar charts comparing the IO payment to the amortizing payment side by side. The visual makes the payment jump immediately tangible — not just a number, but a clear before-and-after contrast that’s easy to explain to a lender or co-borrower.

Two-Phase Amortization Schedule

A full year-by-year table for the entire loan term, with IO-period rows clearly marked and amortization-period rows distinguished. During the IO years you’ll see zero principal reduction; once amortization begins, track exactly how quickly (or slowly) your balance decreases.

Total Interest by Phase

The calculator separates total interest paid during the IO period from total interest paid during the amortization period, plus the combined lifetime total. This breakdown helps you understand exactly where the extra interest cost versus a conventional mortgage comes from.

2-Page PDF Report

Page 1 covers loan details, phase comparison bars, payment jump summary, and 6 key loan metrics. Page 2 is the full year-by-year amortization schedule with IO-period rows highlighted for clarity. Download, print, and share with your lender, broker, or financial advisor.

Interest-Only Mortgages in Numbers

3–10
Typical IO period length in years before mandatory amortization begins
$0
Principal paid during the IO phase — your balance remains exactly what you borrowed
20–40%
Typical payment increase when amortization begins on a 30-year loan with 10-year IO period
$100K+
Additional lifetime interest on a $500K IO loan vs a conventional 30-year fixed at the same rate
20 yrs
Amortization window remaining on a 30/10 IO loan — compressing repayment of the full balance

Three Borrowers Who Should Run This Calculator

An interest-only mortgage isn’t a product most borrowers should use — but for the right financial profile, it can provide genuine advantages. These three profiles illustrate when IO makes sense and what to watch for in each scenario.


The Real Estate Investor
Maximizing cash flow during hold

You’re acquiring a rental or investment property with a defined hold period — typically 5 to 10 years — and plan to sell or refinance before amortization begins. An IO mortgage maximizes monthly cash flow during the hold period, improving your return on invested capital. Since you don’t plan to hold through the amortization phase, the payment jump is irrelevant to your model. The key variables are your exit cap rate, appreciation assumption, and the carrying cost spread between IO and amortizing payments.

  • Use the IO payment (not the amortizing payment) to model your debt service coverage ratio and monthly cash-on-cash return
  • Check the amortization table to confirm your loan balance at exit — appreciation must cover the unchanged balance plus selling costs
  • Build a buffer: if the exit timeline slips, confirm you can service the amortizing payment for 6–12 months without a sale
The Variable-Income Professional
Low floor, voluntary prepayment

You’re a physician, attorney, business owner, or commission-based professional with high income that varies significantly year to year. An IO mortgage gives you a low required minimum payment in lean years while allowing voluntary principal payments in strong years — effectively creating a flexible, self-directed amortization schedule. Your average annual income may comfortably service the amortizing payment; what you need is protection against paying that full amount in a down year.

  • The IO payment is your floor — model your worst-case income year against it, not your average year
  • Make voluntary principal payments in strong years to build equity and reduce the eventual amortizing payment
  • Use the amortization table to project what your balance — and the resulting amortizing payment — would be if you make $X in extra principal per year
The Jumbo Market Buyer
Qualifying on a compressed payment

You’re purchasing in a high-cost market where homes regularly exceed $1.5M–$2M+. The IO payment allows you to qualify for a higher loan amount at a lower debt-to-income ratio, or to free up cash for a larger down payment on a primary residence while preserving capital for other investments. This strategy works when strong appreciation is likely and when you expect income or net worth growth before the amortization phase requires the higher payment.

  • Run this calculator with the full amortizing payment — confirm it’s serviceable on your current income, not just projected future income
  • The payment jump on a $1.5M IO loan can exceed $2,000/month — model it explicitly before relying on future income or appreciation
  • Ask your lender about qualifying at the amortizing payment rate: some portfolio lenders allow IO qualification, others require full amortization underwriting

7 Things Every Interest-Only Borrower Should Know

An IO mortgage is a powerful but misunderstood tool. These seven tips will help you model the real cost, stress-test the payment transition, and make a clear-eyed decision about whether IO is the right structure for your situation.


Your Balance Is Unchanged at the End of the IO Period — Plan for It

Every dollar you pay during the IO period goes to interest. When the IO period ends, your balance is identical to the original loan amount. The amortizing payment is then calculated on that full original balance over a compressed remaining term — which is why the payment jump is so significant. Use this calculator to see exactly what the balance is at the IO period end and what the resulting amortizing payment looks like on your specific numbers.

Always Stress-Test the Amortizing Payment on Your Current Income

Many IO borrowers qualify based on the IO payment and plan to handle the higher amortizing payment with future income growth. This works until it doesn’t. Before committing to an IO mortgage, confirm the amortizing payment is serviceable on your current verified income — not your expected future income. If it isn’t manageable today, have a fully funded refinance plan with specific milestones, not a vague expectation.

You Build No Equity Through Payments During the IO Phase

Your equity can only grow through property appreciation during the IO period — payments contribute nothing. This creates risk in flat or declining markets: if values don’t rise, you’ll have the same loan balance you started with and no buffer if you need to sell, refinance, or face a job loss. IO mortgages rely on appreciation more than conventional loans. Use the amortization table to see exactly how long it takes before your balance starts meaningfully decreasing.

Understand Exactly How Much the IO Period Costs in Extra Interest

The savings on monthly payments during the IO phase are real, but they come at a cost: you pay interest on the full balance for an extended period before any principal reduction begins. On a $600,000 loan at 6.5% with a 10-year IO period, you’ll pay approximately $150,000 in additional lifetime interest compared to a conventional 30-year fixed. This calculator shows you the exact interest split by phase so you can weigh the monthly cash-flow benefit against the lifetime cost.

Voluntary Principal Payments During IO Can Reduce the Later Payment Shock

Nothing prevents you from paying principal voluntarily during the IO period. Every dollar of extra principal reduces the balance that the amortizing payment will be calculated against when the IO period ends. If you have a variable-income year where cash flow is strong, directing extra payments to principal during the IO phase is one of the most effective ways to reduce future payment shock and total lifetime interest cost simultaneously.

The Amortization Window Gets Shorter the Longer the IO Period

A 30-year loan with a 3-year IO period leaves 27 years to amortize the full balance — the payment jump is relatively modest. A 30-year loan with a 10-year IO period compresses full repayment into just 20 years. The shorter the amortization window relative to the loan term, the larger the payment jump. Compare different IO period lengths in this calculator — reducing the IO period from 10 to 5 years often meaningfully reduces the amortizing payment.

Download the PDF and Review the Amortization Table Before You Sign

The 2-page PDF report includes the full year-by-year amortization schedule with IO-period rows clearly labelled. Review it before closing — specifically look at year 1 of the amortization phase to confirm the payment number matches your loan disclosure, and check the balance trajectory over the first 5 years of amortization to understand how quickly equity builds once principal repayment begins. Bring the PDF to your lender meeting and ask them to confirm the numbers match your loan estimate.

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about how interest-only mortgages work, how this calculator models them, and how to interpret both the IO and amortizing payment phases.


An IO mortgage has two distinct phases. During the interest-only period — typically 3 to 10 years — your payment covers only the interest that accrues each month. No principal is repaid, so your balance stays exactly the same. When the IO period ends, the loan converts to a fully amortizing schedule: the original balance must be repaid over the remaining years. Because the amortization window is shorter than a full 30-year term and no principal was paid during the IO phase, the required monthly payment increases — often substantially. This calculator shows you both payments before you commit.
The IO payment is simple: loan balance × annual rate ÷ 12. On a $500,000 loan at 6.5%, the monthly IO payment is $500,000 × 0.065 ÷ 12 = $2,708.33. A conventional 30-year P&I payment on the same loan and rate would be $3,160 — a difference of about $450/month. The IO payment stays constant throughout the IO period because the balance never changes. The amortizing payment is calculated using the standard mortgage formula on the original balance over the remaining loan term — typically 20 to 27 years depending on the IO period length.
Your balance remains completely unchanged during the IO period. If you borrow $600,000 and make IO payments for 10 years, your balance at the end of year 10 is still $600,000. Every dollar paid went to interest. This means two things: (1) you build zero equity through payments — your equity can only grow through property appreciation, and (2) the full $600,000 must be repaid in the remaining years of the loan term, which is why the amortizing payment is higher than a conventional 30-year would have been. The amortization table in this calculator shows you year-by-year that your balance is flat during the IO phase.
Two factors combine to drive the increase. First, you’re now paying both principal and interest, where before you only paid interest. Second, you must repay the full original balance in fewer years — on a 30-year loan with a 10-year IO period, the entire original balance must be amortized in 20 years rather than 30. On a $500,000 loan at 6.5%, the IO payment is ~$2,708/month; the amortizing payment over 20 years is ~$3,731 — a $1,023/month (38%) jump. This calculator shows the exact increase for your specific scenario in the payment jump summary row.
IO mortgages work best for three borrower types. Real estate investors who plan to sell before the amortization phase begins — they maximize cash flow during the hold period with no intention of staying through the payment reset. Variable-income professionals (physicians, attorneys, business owners) who want a low required minimum payment but can make voluntary principal payments in strong income years. Jumbo buyers in high-cost markets who need a lower payment to qualify or to preserve capital. IO mortgages are a poor fit for buyers who plan to stay long-term without a clear income growth path, or who cannot comfortably absorb the amortizing payment on current income.
Significantly more — because you pay interest on the full balance for longer before any principal reduction begins. On a $500,000 loan at 6.5%: a conventional 30-year fixed accrues approximately $640,000 in total interest. The same loan with a 10-year IO period accrues approximately $757,000 — about $117,000 more. With a 5-year IO period the premium drops to around $53,000 extra. This calculator splits total interest into IO-period interest and amortization-period interest separately, so you can see exactly how the IO phase contributes to the lifetime cost and evaluate whether the cash-flow benefit justifies it.
Three risks stand out. Payment shock: the transition to amortizing payments can increase your monthly obligation by 20%–40% or more. If your income hasn’t grown to match, this can create real financial stress. No equity buildup: during the IO period, you accumulate zero equity through payments. In a flat or declining market, you could owe the same amount you originally borrowed years later — limiting refinance options and creating negative equity risk. Refinance risk: IO loans sometimes convert or reset at the end of the IO period; if your financial profile has changed (lower credit score, higher DTI, property depreciation), refinancing at that moment may be unavailable or significantly more expensive. Run all three scenarios in this calculator before deciding.

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