Mortgage Repayment Calculator

Calculate your home loan repayments, total interest payable, and amortisation schedule.

$

Total amount borrowed

%
years
years

Only shown for interest-only loans

$

Additional amount per repayment period

How It Works

The calculator uses the standard annuity formula to compute principal-and-interest repayments: PMT = P[r(1+r)^n] / [(1+r)^n - 1], where P is the loan amount, r is the periodic interest rate, and n is the total number of payments. For interest-only loans, it shows interest payments for the IO period, then P&I for the remainder. Extra repayments are applied to the principal each period.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it better to pay weekly or monthly?

Paying weekly (1/4 of the monthly amount each week) means you make 52 payments = 13 months of payments per year instead of 12. This extra month of payments reduces your loan term by roughly 4-5 years on a 30-year loan and saves tens of thousands in interest.

What is a typical mortgage rate in Australia in 2025-26?

As of early 2026, variable home loan rates from major banks range from about 5.9% to 6.5% p.a. Fixed rates for 1-3 year terms sit around 5.7% to 6.3%. Rates vary by lender, LVR, and loan features.

How much can extra repayments save?

On a $500,000 loan at 6.2% over 30 years, an extra $200/month saves approximately $95,000 in interest and cuts over 5 years off the loan term. Even small extra payments early in the loan have outsized effects.

What is an offset account?

An offset account is a transaction account linked to your mortgage. Your balance offsets the loan principal for interest calculation. A $50,000 offset balance on a $500,000 loan means you only pay interest on $450,000.