If you're like many homeowners, you dream of paying off your mortgage early.
It can mean a more secure retirement, more travel, more cash for your kids' college tuition and a massive savings on interest that you would have paid over the remaining years of the loan!
Here are three ways to pay off a mortgage faster.
Thanks for subscribing!
Read the best of Moneywise in 5 minutes or less.
By signing up, you accept Moneywise Terms of Use, Subscription Agreement, and Privacy Policy.
Our example mortgage for this article is a $200,000, 30-year fixed-rate loan with a 4% interest rate. We also assume that the home cost $250,000 and that the buyer made a down payment of 20%, or $50,000.
1. Make payments more often
If you make payments more frequently, you'll save money in interest charges over the long run.
Making payments more frequently will allow you to pay down your principal faster and save money in interest charges over the long run.
In our example, the monthly payment is roughly $955. You could resolve to pay half that amount — $477.50 — every other week. Doesn't sound too painful, right?
But you'd wind up making the equivalent of one additional monthly payment each year. And that's all it would take to shorten your payment period by three years and one month — and save you nearly $15,000 in interest!
Use this mortgage payoff calculator to see the interest you would save by making an additional monthly payment.
Must Read
- The ultra-rich use these 5 real estate strategies to build wealth while they sleep — you can start with just $100
- Here’s the average income of Americans by age in 2026. Are you keeping up or falling behind?
- Insurance companies profit most from drivers who auto-renew without shopping around. Comparing 100+ quotes takes 2 minutes and costs nothing
Join 250,000+ readers and get Moneywise’s best stories and exclusive interviews first — clear insights curated and delivered weekly. Subscribe now.
2. Make a lump-sum payment
Do you have an inheritance, bonus or tax refund?
Did you get an inheritance, a bonus or a tax refund? Apply it to your mortgage! Even a relatively small amount of money can help cut the time you'll be in debt and save you money.
A lump-sum payment applied directly to your outstanding principal can cut your interest costs by a surprising amount.
For example, if you were to make an extra $5,000 lump-sum payment on our sample mortgage, you would end up paying $11,126 less in interest and would trim 17 months off your schedule of payments.
3. Refinance to a mortgage with a shorter term
Refinancing your mortgage can be a great financial move.
Refinancing to a shorter-term home loan can slash your interest costs, allow you to build equity more quickly and get you out from under mortgage payments sooner. But you may face a stiffer monthly payment to pay your mortgage off faster.
After five years, the $200,000 mortgage in our example would still have a balance of about $181,000.
You could refinance into a 15-year mortgage, slashing 10 years off your remaining loan time. A 15-year loan comes with a lower rate than a 30-year mortgage, so you might score your new loan at 3.5%.
Reducing your loan term and interest rate in this manner would save you almost $54,000 in interest charges and let you pay your mortgage off early.
However, you'd have to manage a new monthly payment of about $1,294 — an increase of almost $340. Every month. Could you handle that?
More: Can you refinance to a 10 year mortgage?
Use our rate comparison tool to find the best offer.
You May Also Like
- JP Morgan sees gold hitting $6,000/oz before 2027 — and a Gold IRA lets you hold the physical metal while deferring the tax bill. Get your free guide from Priority Gold
- Dave Ramsey warns nearly 50% of Americans are making 1 big Social Security mistake — here’s what it is and the simple steps to fix it ASAP
- Thanks to Jeff Bezos, you can now become a landlord for as little as $100 — and no, you don't have to deal with tenants or fix freezers. Here's how
- Millionaires under 43 are reshaping investing — just 25% of their portfolios are in stocks. Here’s where their money is going
Doug Whiteman was formerly the editor-in-chief of MoneyWise. He has been quoted by The Wall Street Journal, USA Today and CNBC.com and has been interviewed on Fox Business, CBS Radio and the syndicated TV show "First Business."
Mortgages • Apr 17
What is a home equity line of credit (HELOC)?
Mortgages • Mar 19
