Zero Down Payment. Estimate Your USDA Loan Payment Instantly.
Estimate your USDA Rural Development loan payment — including P&I, the 1% Upfront Guarantee Fee (financed into loan), and the 0.35% Annual Fee, plus taxes, insurance, HOA, and extra payments.
| # | Date | Payment | Principal | Interest | USDA Fee | Balance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calculate to see schedule | ||||||
How to Use This Calculator
Two input sections, a single click — and you get your full monthly USDA payment with all fees included, a visual chart, and a month-by-month amortization table you can download as a PDF.
Enter your home price and down payment
Type the purchase price or drag the slider up to $800K. USDA loans allow 0% down — leave the down payment at zero to model a true no-money-down scenario, or add a small down payment to see how it reduces your financed amount.
Set your term and interest rate
USDA loans are 30-year fixed by default, but you can set any term. Adjust the rate slider to match the APR your lender quoted — note that USDA rates are set by individual lenders, not the government, so shopping multiple lenders is essential.
Add property tax, insurance, and HOA
Enter your estimated annual property tax and homeowners insurance to see your total PITI payment. These figures are easy to find — your county assessor’s website has the tax rate, and your insurance agent can quote coverage within minutes.
Download your PDF and share with your lender
Click “Download PDF” for a two-page report: page 1 covers your full payment breakdown, USDA fee detail, and 6 summary cards; page 2 is the complete month-by-month amortization table with year-start rows highlighted for easy reading.
What This Calculator Shows You
Not just a base payment — a complete USDA cost picture including both guarantee fees, all escrow items, the impact of extra payments, visual charts, and a full amortization schedule.
Full Monthly PITI + Fees
Your complete monthly obligation: principal and interest on the financed loan, the monthly USDA annual fee (0.35% ÷ 12), monthly property tax, homeowners insurance, and HOA dues — all broken down individually and totalled in real time.
USDA Upfront & Annual Fee Detail
The calculator shows the 1% upfront fee in dollars (e.g. $3,000 on a $300K loan), the total financed amount (base loan + fee), and the monthly cost of the 0.35% annual fee — giving you a clear picture of exactly what the USDA guarantee fees add to your loan.
Proportional Payment Breakdown Bars
A set of visual bars showing each component of your monthly payment as a proportion of the total — so you can instantly see what percentage goes to P&I, the USDA fee, taxes, insurance, and HOA. Updates live as you change any input.
Interest Saved via Extra Payments
Enter any extra monthly principal payment and the calculator recalculates your payoff date and total interest with precision. The “Interest Saved” summary card shows the exact dollar difference — often thousands of dollars — motivating you to pay just a little more each month.
Loan Balance Over Time Chart
A live line chart showing your remaining USDA loan balance plotted year by year — visualising how the financed upfront fee starts you slightly above the purchase price and how the balance declines through the term. Toggle extra payments to see the accelerated payoff line.
Full Monthly Amortization Schedule
Every payment listed month by month — payment amount, principal, interest, USDA annual fee, and remaining balance. Year-start rows are highlighted in blue. The PDF download includes this table on page 2, formatted for sharing with your lender or keeping in your records.
Why USDA Loans Are One of America’s Best-Kept Homebuying Secrets
USDA vs. FHA vs. Conventional — At a Glance
Before you commit to any loan program, see how USDA stacks up against the most common alternatives on the five factors that matter most.
| USDA Loan | FHA Loan | Conventional | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Down payment |
0% required
✓ Best
|
3.5% minimum | 3–20% typical |
| Mortgage insurance |
1% upfront + 0.35%/yr
✓ Lowest ongoing
|
1.75% upfront + 0.55–0.85%/yr | 0% if 20% down; PMI at 0.2–2%/yr if less |
| Geographic restriction | Eligible rural & suburban areas only | No restriction | No restriction |
| Income limit | 115% of area median income | No income limit | No income limit |
| Min. credit score | 640 (streamlined); lower with manual UW | 580 (3.5% down); 500 (10% down) | 620 standard; 700+ for best rates |
| Interest rates |
Typically competitive with conventional
✓ Often lowest
|
Slightly higher than conventional | Varies; best rates need 740+ score |
| Loan limits | No set limit — varies by income & area | FHA county limits apply | Conforming limits ($766,550 in 2024) |
Three Buyers Who Used This Calculator to Confirm They Qualify
USDA eligibility surprises many people — the income limits are higher than most expect, and the eligible areas include plenty of suburban communities. Here are three profiles that regularly qualify.
Maria earns $62,000 a year as a registered nurse in a mid-size Southern city. She wants to buy a $265,000 home in a community about 18 miles from downtown — a neighborhood she didn’t realise was USDA-eligible until she checked the map. With 0% down and no PMI-equivalent at FHA’s rate, her USDA payment is $210/month less than the FHA alternative.
- Enter $265,000 as the home price with $0 down to see the 0% down scenario immediately
- Compare: run the same inputs with a 3.5% FHA down payment and add FHA MIP to see the real gap
- Add $100/month in extra principal — the savings over 30 years will surprise you
- Use the PDF to bring a credible payment estimate to your pre-approval meeting
Tom works in construction and Lisa works part-time at a school. Together they earn $88,000 — well within the USDA limit for a 4-person household in their county ($110,650). They’re buying a $310,000 home in a town of 8,000 people. The zero-down USDA loan lets them preserve their savings for moving costs, furniture, and a repair fund.
- Enter $310,000 with $0 down — the calculator auto-finances the $3,100 upfront fee
- Enter actual property tax from the county assessor’s site for a precise PITI estimate
- Set extra payments to $0 to budget conservatively, then test $150/mo to see how fast they build equity
- USDA income limits count all household income — confirm the limit for their specific county
Carlos is a veteran eligible for both a VA loan and a USDA loan. The home he wants is in a USDA-eligible area and his income is within limits. He uses this calculator to model the USDA payment and compares it against his VA loan estimate — the VA has no funding fee for disabled veterans, but USDA’s lower rate in his lender’s quote tips the scales. He runs both scenarios side-by-side.
- Run the USDA scenario with the rate your lender quoted for USDA, then run it again with the VA rate
- VA has no ongoing annual fee — compare Carlos’s USDA monthly payment including the 0.35% fee
- If eligible for both, the better loan depends on the rate difference and loan amount
- Download the USDA PDF and ask your lender to provide a matching Loan Estimate for the VA option
8 Things Every USDA Loan Applicant Should Know
USDA loans offer exceptional value, but they come with rules most buyers aren’t told upfront. These eight points will save you time and help you avoid the most common mistakes.
Always Verify Property Eligibility Before Falling in Love With a Home
USDA eligibility is tied to the specific property address — not just a general area. Check every property you’re seriously considering using the official USDA eligibility map at eligibility.sc.egov.usda.gov before you make an offer. Boundaries can change and the map is updated periodically.
Count All Household Income — Not Just Borrowers on the Loan
The USDA income limit applies to everyone living in the home, even family members who won’t be on the mortgage. A teenager with a part-time job or a parent moving in can affect your eligibility. Get a full household income calculation from your lender before you apply to avoid a late-stage disqualification.
The Upfront Fee Is Typically Financed — But You Can Pay It in Cash
Most borrowers finance the 1% upfront guarantee fee into the loan, keeping closing costs low. However, if you have the cash, paying it at closing reduces your loan balance and total interest. Use this calculator to compare both scenarios — enter $0 extra financed or add the fee to see the difference over your full term.
USDA Rates Are Set by Lenders — Shop at Least Three
The USDA guarantees the loan but does not set the interest rate. Each approved lender prices USDA loans independently. A 0.5% rate difference on a $300,000 loan over 30 years is roughly $30,000 in total interest. Always get quotes from your bank, a credit union, and at least one online USDA specialist before choosing a lender.
The USDA Annual Fee Never Automatically Drops Off
Unlike conventional PMI — which can be removed when you reach 20% equity — the USDA annual fee stays for the life of the loan. The only way to eliminate it is to refinance into a conventional loan once your equity reaches 20%. Model when that crossover might happen before assuming the fee is permanent.
USDA Loans Require the Home to Be Your Primary Residence
USDA financing is exclusively for owner-occupied primary residences. You cannot use a USDA loan to purchase an investment property, a second home, or a vacation property. The home must be in move-in condition — USDA will not finance properties with significant structural issues, though the USDA 504 repair loan program can help fund essential repairs separately.
Closing Costs Can Be Rolled In or Covered by Seller Concessions
USDA loans allow up to 100% financing of the purchase price plus the upfront fee. Closing costs (typically 2–5% of the purchase price) can be covered through seller concessions negotiated in your offer — up to 6% of the purchase price is allowed. This makes a truly zero-cash-to-close purchase possible for many USDA borrowers.
Extra Monthly Payments Dramatically Cut Your Total Interest
Because USDA loans start with a slightly higher balance (upfront fee financed in), early extra payments have a magnified effect. Even $75–$150/month extra in the first 5 years can reduce your total interest by thousands and cut years off your term. Use the extra payment field in this calculator to model your personalised savings — then put that number in writing to stay motivated.
Frequently Asked Questions
The most common questions buyers ask before applying for a USDA loan — from eligibility and fees to credit requirements and how the program compares to FHA.
Disclaimer: All results produced by the USDA Loan Calculator are estimates for educational and illustrative purposes only and do not constitute financial, legal, or mortgage advice. USDA guarantee fee rates (currently 1% upfront and 0.35% annual) are set by USDA and are subject to change. Actual loan amounts, interest rates, income limits, property eligibility, and approval decisions are determined by USDA-approved lenders and the USDA agency. Income limits and eligible area boundaries vary by county and are updated periodically — always verify current limits at usda.gov. This tool does not account for closing costs, prepaid items, or lender-specific fees. This is not an offer to lend and does not constitute a loan application. Always consult a USDA-approved lender and a qualified financial advisor before making any home financing decision.
