Amortization Schedule for a Typical Kansas 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 Kansas's median home scenario — $251,100 loan at 6.51%:
- Monthly rate r = 6.51% ÷ 12 = 0.5425%
- Monthly payment M = $1,589
- Month 1 interest: $1,362 | Month 1 principal: $227
- After 5 years (60 payments): balance still $235,068
- After 15 years (180 payments): balance still $182,202 (73% of original)
- Total interest over 30 years: $320,940
The key insight: after paying $1,589/month for 15 years — halfway through the loan — you still owe $182,202. This is because early payments are almost entirely interest. Paying just $200 extra per month would save approximately $97,955 in interest and shorten the loan by roughly 7.9 years.