The Mathematical Formula for Amortization

Most borrowers view their loan as a "black box," but the calculation is a rigid algebraic formula. To calculate the monthly payment ($M$) for a fixed-rate loan, lenders use:

M = P [ i(1 + i)ⁿ ] / [ (1 + i)ⁿ – 1 ]

Where:

  • P: The Principal loan amount ($300,000)
  • i: Your monthly interest rate (Annual Rate ÷ 12)
  • n: Number of months (30 years = 360 months)

This formula is designed so that the payment remains **identical** every month, while the internal ratio of principal to interest shifts precisely to ensure the balance hits $0.00 at the end of the term.

The "Interest-First" Reality

In the first month of a 30-year mortgage at 6.6%, a shocking **85% of your payment** is devoured by interest. You are merely renting the money from the bank. It takes approximately **21 years** into a 30-year mortgage before more of your monthly payment goes toward the house (principal) than to the bank (interest). This is the "Ammortization Tipping Point."

Weaponizing Extra Payments: The Life-Cycle Hack

Because interest is calculated every single month on the *remaining balance*, reducing that balance early creates a massive cascading savings effect.

  • The "One Extra Payment" Rule: If you make just one extra principal-only payment per year (the equivalent of 1/12th extra each month), you truncate approximately **5 years** off a 30-year mortgage. You literally delete 60 months of high-interest payments as part of a mortgage payoff strategy.
  • Bi-Weekly Payments: By paying half your mortgage every two weeks instead of once a month, you end up making 26 half-payments (13 full payments) per year. This automatically executes the "One Extra Payment" rule without you ever feeling the budget pinch.
  • Principal Only: Always verify with your lender that extra funds are being applied to "Principal Reduction," not "Prepaid Interest." Reducing the principal instantly lowers the mathematical base for next month's interest charge.