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Amortization Calculator in Arizona

On Arizona's median home price of $455,000 with a 10% down payment, the loan is $409,500. At the state's average 6.51% rate, monthly P&I is $2,591 and total interest over 30 years is $523,260. Enter your loan details below. Formula shown, sources cited — no account required.

$410K
Typical Loan Amount
$2,591
Monthly P&I Payment
$523K
Total Interest (30yr)
$
%
years
$

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Amortization Schedule for a Typical Arizona Home Loan

The amortization formula for a fixed-rate loan is:

M = P × [r(1+r)^n] / [(1+r)^n − 1]

M = monthly payment | P = principal | r = monthly rate (annual ÷ 12) | n = total payments

For Arizona's median home scenario — $409,500 loan at 6.51%:

  • Monthly rate r = 6.51% ÷ 12 = 0.5425%
  • Monthly payment M = $2,591
  • Month 1 interest: $2,222 | Month 1 principal: $369
  • After 5 years (60 payments): balance still $383,382
  • After 15 years (180 payments): balance still $297,255 (73% of original)
  • Total interest over 30 years: $523,260

The key insight: after paying $2,591/month for 15 years — halfway through the loan — you still owe $297,255. This is because early payments are almost entirely interest. Paying just $200 extra per month would save approximately $112,206 in interest and shorten the loan by roughly 5.5 years.

Questions You Might Ask — Amortization in Arizona

What does the amortization schedule look like for a typical Arizona home loan?+
On Arizona's median home price of $455,000 with a 10% down payment ($45,500), the loan amount is $409,500. At the state's average rate of 6.51% over 30 years, the monthly principal and interest payment is $2,591. In the first month, $2,222 goes to interest and only $369 reduces principal. After 15 years (payment 180), the remaining balance is still $297,255 — nearly 73% of the original loan — because of front-loaded interest.
How much total interest will I pay on a Arizona home loan?+
On a $409,500 loan at 6.51% for 30 years, total interest paid is $523,260 — bringing the total cost to $932,760 for a $409,500 loan. That means you pay $128% more than you borrowed over the full term. Choosing a 15-year term instead reduces total interest to approximately $225,002 (roughly 43% of the 30-year figure) but raises the monthly payment by about 35–40%.
How is each monthly mortgage payment calculated in Arizona?+
The standard amortization formula is: M = P × [r(1+r)^n] / [(1+r)^n − 1]. For a $409,500 loan in Arizona at 6.51%: monthly rate r = 6.51% ÷ 12 = 0.5425%, total payments n = 360. Each month, the interest portion equals the outstanding balance × monthly rate. The principal portion equals the fixed payment minus interest. Early payments are interest-heavy; late payments are principal-heavy.
How much does an extra $200/month save on a Arizona mortgage?+
Adding $200/month extra principal to a $409,500 Arizona mortgage at 6.51% saves approximately $112,206 in total interest and pays off the loan about 5.5 years early. Every extra dollar paid toward principal today reduces the balance on which future interest is calculated — creating a compounding benefit that grows the longer it runs. The earlier in the loan you start, the greater the savings.
What is the amortization formula and how does it work?+
Amortization uses the formula M = P × [r(1+r)^n] / [(1+r)^n − 1], where M is the fixed monthly payment, P is the principal, r is the monthly interest rate (annual rate ÷ 12), and n is the total number of payments. This formula is designed so M stays constant while the interest-to-principal ratio shifts each month — more interest early when the balance is high, more principal later when the balance is low. For a 30-year loan, the crossover point where principal exceeds interest typically occurs around year 18–20, depending on the rate.

Data Sources & Methodology

Median home prices from the National Association of Realtors (NAR). Mortgage rates from Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey (PMMS). Down payment percentages from the National Association of Realtors Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers. Amortization formula: standard fixed-rate installment formula per CFPB mortgage disclosure requirements. Last updated 2026.

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