home / mortgage / $250,000

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Total interest on a $250,000 mortgage

Exact principal-and-interest figures for a $250,000 fixed-rate home loan across common rates and terms, computed with the standard amortization formula. For your own rate, use the interactive calculator.

Term & rateMonthly P&ITotal interest Total paidInterest % of loan
30-yr @ 5.0%$1,342$233,141$483,14193%
30-yr @ 5.5%$1,419$261,012$511,012104%
30-yr @ 6.0%$1,499$289,593$539,593116%
30-yr @ 6.5%$1,580$318,862$568,862128%
30-yr @ 7.0%$1,663$348,769$598,769140%
15-yr @ 5.0%$1,977$105,858$355,85842%
15-yr @ 5.5%$2,043$117,687$367,68747%
15-yr @ 6.0%$2,110$129,736$379,73652%
15-yr @ 6.5%$2,178$141,998$391,99857%
15-yr @ 7.0%$2,247$154,473$404,47362%

On a $250,000 loan, the spread between the cheapest and most expensive combination above is the largest controllable number in the purchase. Two levers move it: the term and extra principal payments — both calculators accept this amount directly. Wondering if that money belongs in the market instead? The payoff vs invest comparison referees it fairly.

Other loan amounts: $100,000 · $150,000 · $200,000 · $300,000 · $350,000 · $400,000 · $450,000 · $500,000 · $600,000 · $700,000 · $750,000 · $800,000 · $900,000 · $1,000,000

Frequently asked questions

How much interest will I pay on a $250,000 mortgage?

At 6.5% over 30 years, about $318,862 — roughly 128% of the amount borrowed. The table above shows totals across common rates and both major terms.

What's the monthly payment on a $250,000 mortgage?

Principal and interest at 6.5% over 30 years is about $1,580/month; a 15-year term at 5.9% runs about $2,096/month but cuts total interest to $127,309.

How can I pay less interest on a $250,000 loan?

Extra principal payments, a shorter term, or a lower rate. The extra payment calculator shows exactly what each option saves on this amount.

How much income do I need for a $250,000 mortgage?

Lenders typically cap total housing costs near 28–36% of gross income. With a P&I payment of about $1,580 plus taxes and insurance, work backward from those ratios — and remember qualification is a lender decision, not a math constant.