Mortgage amortization is simply the process of paying off a loan in equal installments, where each payment covers the interest due that month plus a slice of the principal. The mechanics surprise most first-time buyers: for years, your payment barely dents the balance. Here is exactly why, with the math.
You can follow along with our mortgage payment & amortization calculator, which builds the full schedule for any loan.
What does “amortization” actually mean?
To amortize a loan means to spread its repayment over time in fixed, scheduled payments. With a standard fixed-rate mortgage, every monthly payment is the same dollar amount, but the split between interest and principal changes every single month.
The monthly principal-and-interest payment comes from one formula:
M = P · r / (1 − (1 + r)⁻ⁿ)
where M is the monthly payment, P is the loan amount, r is the monthly interest rate (annual rate ÷ 12), and n is the total number of payments (years × 12).
Why are early payments mostly interest?
Each month, the interest you owe is your current balance × monthly rate. Whatever is left of your fixed payment after covering that interest goes to principal.
At the very start, your balance is at its maximum, so the interest charge is large and the leftover principal is small. As the balance falls, the monthly interest charge falls too — so more of your unchanged payment attacks the principal. This is why amortization “accelerates”: the principal portion grows a little every month.
A worked example
Take a $320,000 loan at 6.5% over 30 years. The fixed payment is about $2,023/month. Here is how the very first payments break down:
| Payment | Interest | Principal | Balance after |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $1,733 | $290 | $319,710 |
| 2 | $1,732 | $291 | $319,419 |
| 12 | $1,718 | $305 | $316,316 |
| 180 (yr 15) | $1,143 | $880 | $210,180 |
| 360 (final) | $11 | $2,012 | $0 |
Figures rounded; computed with the standard amortization formula above.
Notice the pattern:
- In month 1, only about $290 of a $2,023 payment reduces the balance — the rest is interest.
- By year 15, the principal share has nearly tripled.
- In the final payment, almost all of it is principal.
Over the full 30 years, this borrower pays roughly $408,000 in interest on top of the $320,000 borrowed — more than the house itself.
How to read your amortization schedule
An amortization schedule lists, for each payment:
- Interest paid — rate ÷ 12 × the balance going in.
- Principal paid — the payment minus that interest.
- Remaining balance — the previous balance minus the principal paid.
The key milestone to look for is the crossover point — the payment where principal first exceeds interest. On a 30-year loan around 6–7%, that typically lands somewhere in years 18–21. Before it, you are mostly renting money; after it, you are mostly buying equity.
How extra payments rewrite the schedule
Because interest is charged on the current balance, anything you pay above the required amount goes directly to principal and removes all the future interest that dollar would have generated. The effect is front-loaded: an extra payment in year 1 saves far more than the same payment in year 25.
You can quantify this with our extra payment payoff calculator — on the loan above, an extra $200/month cuts roughly five to six years off the term and tens of thousands in interest.
Key takeaways
- Amortization keeps your payment fixed but shifts it from interest-heavy to principal-heavy over time.
- Early payments build equity slowly; that is normal, not a scam.
- Extra principal payments save the most when made early.
- Always read the schedule to find your crossover point and total interest.
For a bigger-picture view of what you can borrow, see how much house can I afford? and the difference between APR vs APY.
This article is general education, not financial advice. Verify any figure with your lender before deciding.