Mortgage Calculator Monthly Payments, Amortisation & Overpayment
Calculate your monthly mortgage repayment, total interest cost and full amortisation schedule instantly. See exactly how much you save by making overpayments — in years off your mortgage and interest saved. Interest-only mode. Download the complete schedule as CSV. 7 currencies. All calculations run in your browser — no data sent anywhere.
Calculate Your Mortgage Repayments Instantly
Enter your property price, deposit, rate and term. Results update in real time as you type. Add an overpayment to see interest and years saved.
| Period | Payment | Principal | Interest | Balance |
|---|
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What This Mortgage Calculator Shows
How to Calculate Your Mortgage
LazyTools vs Other Mortgage Calculators
| Feature | LazyTools | MoneySavingExpert | Bankrate | NatWest |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly repayment | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| Full amortisation schedule | ✅ Yes | ⚠ Partial | ✅ Yes | ❌ No |
| Download CSV | ✅ Yes | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No |
| Overpayment simulator | ✅ Yes (exact savings) | ✅ Yes | ⚠ Limited | ❌ No |
| Interest-only toggle | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ⚠ Separate tool |
| Live recalculation (no button) | ✅ Yes | ❌ Button | ❌ Button | ❌ Button |
| No account required | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ⚠ Partial |
| No ads / tracking | ✅ Yes | ❌ Many ads | ❌ Many ads | ❌ Tracking |
Monthly Payment Reference — Common Loan Sizes
| Loan amount | At 4% | At 5% | At 6% | At 7% |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £100,000 / 25yr | £528 | £585 | £644 | £707 |
| £200,000 / 25yr | £1,056 | £1,170 | £1,289 | £1,413 |
| £300,000 / 25yr | £1,583 | £1,754 | £1,933 | £2,120 |
| £400,000 / 25yr | £2,111 | £2,339 | £2,577 | £2,827 |
| £500,000 / 25yr | £2,639 | £2,924 | £3,222 | £3,533 |
Mortgage Calculator — Understanding Monthly Payments, Amortisation and Overpayments
How the monthly payment formula works
The monthly mortgage payment M is calculated using the amortisation formula: M = P × (r(1+r)^n) / ((1+r)^n − 1), where P is the loan principal, r is the monthly interest rate (annual rate / 12) and n is the total number of payments (years × 12). In the early months of a mortgage almost all of each payment goes to interest because the balance is large and interest accrues on the full amount. As each payment reduces the balance slightly, a little more of the next payment goes to principal. This snowball effect accelerates toward the end of the term.
Why overpayments are so powerful
Every overpayment directly reduces the outstanding balance. Because future interest is calculated on the reduced balance, less interest accrues from that point forward. Paying an extra £200 per month on a £270,000 mortgage at 5% over 25 years typically saves over 4 years of payments and around £30,000 in total interest. The savings are non-linear: overpayments made early in the mortgage save significantly more than the same overpayments made late, because they reduce the balance during the high-interest early years.
Understanding LTV bands and interest rates
LTV (Loan to Value) is the ratio of your mortgage to the property value. Lenders price mortgages in LTV bands: below 95%, 90%, 85%, 80%, 75%, 70% and 60% are common thresholds. A lower LTV means less risk for the lender and typically a better interest rate. Dropping from 90% to 80% LTV (by saving a larger deposit) can reduce your rate by 0.2–0.5%, which on a £250,000 mortgage saves tens of pounds per month and thousands over the mortgage term.
Interest-only vs repayment mortgages
A repayment mortgage (capital and interest) reduces your loan balance with every payment. After the full term, the debt is cleared. An interest-only mortgage has lower monthly payments — you only pay the interest on the loan, never the capital. The balance remains identical throughout the entire term and must be repaid in full when the mortgage ends. This is typically done by selling the property, using savings or a pension. Interest-only is common in buy-to-let investment where rental yield covers the interest and capital growth provides the exit.
Frequently Asked Questions
Monthly payment M = P × (r(1+r)^n) / ((1+r)^n − 1), where P = loan principal, r = monthly rate (annual rate / 12), n = total months (years × 12). This calculator applies this formula and shows every payment split month by month in the amortisation schedule.
A table showing every payment over the mortgage term. Each row shows: payment amount, how much goes to principal, how much to interest, and the remaining balance. In early years interest dominates. As the balance falls, more of each payment reduces the principal. Toggle monthly or yearly view above, or download as CSV.
Overpayments reduce the balance faster, lowering future interest accrual. For a £270k mortgage at 5%, paying £200/month extra saves around 4 years and £30,000 in interest. Enter your overpayment amount to see the exact saving for your mortgage — the green box shows years saved and interest saved automatically.
LTV (Loan to Value) = loan amount / property value. At 80% LTV on a £300k property: £240k loan. Lenders offer better rates at lower LTV bands (90%, 85%, 80%, 75%, 60%). A higher deposit reduces LTV and usually lowers your interest rate, saving significantly over the mortgage term.
Repayment: monthly payment covers interest plus some capital. Loan fully repaid at end of term. Interest-only: monthly payment covers only interest. Capital balance stays the same and must be repaid at term end (by selling, savings or pension). Use the interest-only toggle to compare both for your numbers.
Yes — enter your mortgage details and the full amortisation schedule appears instantly with monthly breakdown. Toggle between yearly summary and all monthly rows. Download the complete schedule as CSV. Overpayment simulator included. Interest-only toggle. 7 currencies. Free, no account, no data sent to any server.
Enter your property price, deposit, rate and term. Then enter a monthly overpayment amount. The green Overpayment savings box shows exactly how many years and months you save, and how much total interest you save compared to making no overpayments. The amortisation schedule updates automatically to show the shorter term.
Most lenders use 4 to 4.5 times gross annual income as a maximum loan size. For a £50,000 salary: up to £225,000 loan. Joint applicants: typically 3 to 4 times combined income. Lenders also run affordability assessments at stressed rates. Use this calculator to find the monthly payment for your target loan size and see if it fits your budget.