A 10% deposit (90%
LTV) gets you on the ladder, but saving to 15โ20% (80โ85% LTV) unlocks
significantly cheaper rates โ often saving ยฃ100โ200/month.
๐ Rate Over Time
Most people don't stay on one rate for 25+ years. Model your initial
deal, then what happens when you revert to SVR.
2y
4.5%
7.99%
๐ฎ Rate Rise Scenarios
๐ก Tip: Uses the loan & term from the Basic
tab. Set those first for accurate results.
Rate Scenario
Live
Fixed Period
ยฃโ
per month
After Revert
ยฃโ
per month (SVR)
Monthly jump at revertโ
Interest during fixed periodโ
Interest after revert (remaining
term)โ
Total interest (full term)โ
Balance remaining at revertโ
โ
โก Remortgage tip:Remortgaging before your fixed period ends (typically 3โ6
months before) can save thousands compared to rolling onto SVR.
๐ธ Overpayment Calculator
See how extra payments slash years off your mortgage and save
thousands in interest.
ยฃ
ยฃ
ยฃ
โน๏ธ How it works: Overpayments reduce your
outstanding capital. This means less interest each month, which compounds to significant
savings over the term.
โ ๏ธ ERC warning: Many fixed-rate deals
limit overpayments to 10% of the balance per year. Exceeding this triggers an Early
Repayment Charge (typically 1โ5% of the overpaid amount). Check your mortgage terms.
Overpayment Impact
Live
Without overpaying
โ
to pay off
With overpayments
โ
to pay off
Years shaved offโ
Interest without overpayingโ
Interest with overpaymentsโ
Total interest savedโ
New payoff dateโ
10% ERC limit (annual)โ
Enter overpayment amounts to see the impact.
๐
Amortisation Chart
How your monthly payment splits
between capital repayment and interest over time. Hover for exact figures.
Capital
repaidInterest
paid
๐ฐ Total Cost
Breakdown
What proportion of your
total repayment is pure interest vs capital.
๐ Balance Over Time
Shows how slowly
balances reduce early on โ the mortgage "hockey stick".
โก Notice
how most capital is repaid in the final years โ this is why the first years
feel slow and why overpaying early has a powerful compounding effect.
๐ Mortgage Timeline
Visualise your mortgage journey โ when rates change, when your LTV
crosses key thresholds, and when you're free.
Fixed deal settings
2y
4.5%
7.99%
๐ก Uses property price, deposit, and term from the Basic tab. Set those first.
Key Milestones
Visual Timeline
A
Scenario A
ยฃ
ยฃ
4.5%
25y
B
Scenario B
ยฃ
ยฃ
3.89%
25y
Side-by-side Comparison
Scenario A
Scenario B
Difference (B vs A)
โ
How the UK Mortgage Calculator works
A mortgage is likely the largest financial commitment you'll ever make โ so it's worth understanding the
numbers before you sign anything. This calculator shows your monthly repayment, total interest paid over
the life of the loan, and a full month-by-month amortisation schedule so you can see exactly how your
debt reduces over time.
Monthly repayments are calculated using the standard annuity formula: your outstanding
balance, divided by the present value of an annuity at your interest rate and remaining term. In plain
English: early payments are mostly interest; later payments are mostly capital. That's why overpaying
early has such a dramatic effect โ you're reducing the balance that interest is charged on.
The deposit you put down directly affects your Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratio, which in turn
determines the interest rates lenders will offer. At 95% LTV (5% deposit) you'll typically pay
significantly more than at 75% LTV (25% deposit). Every percentage point of deposit you can add tends to
improve your rate, particularly at the key thresholds of 90%, 85%, 80%, and 75%.
Repayment vs interest-only
Most residential mortgages in the UK are repayment mortgages, where each payment reduces
both the interest and the capital owed. At the end of the term your mortgage is fully paid off.
Interest-only mortgages keep monthly payments lower because you're only paying the
interest โ but the original capital remains outstanding and must be repaid in full at the end. These are
common for buy-to-let investors but require a credible repayment vehicle for residential use.
The real cost of a longer term
Stretching from a 25-year to a 35-year term cuts your monthly payment meaningfully โ but the total
interest paid over the life of the loan can increase by tens of thousands of pounds. Use the calculator
to run both scenarios side-by-side. Even modest regular overpayments can shave years off your term and
save significant amounts in interest, without the commitment of a shorter term from the outset.
What this calculator doesn't include
Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT), arrangement fees, valuation fees, solicitor costs, and buildings insurance
all add to the true cost of buying a property. These vary considerably by property price and lender, so
treat the calculator's output as the core mortgage cost โ your mortgage adviser can give you a full
picture of the upfront expenses.
UK Mortgage Calculator
Use this calculator to estimate your monthly mortgage repayments, total interest paid, and see a full
amortisation schedule. Enter your property price, deposit, interest rate and term to get started.
How is a mortgage payment calculated?
Monthly repayments are calculated using the standard amortisation formula: M = P ร
[r(1+r)n] / [(1+r)n โ 1] โ where P = loan amount, r = monthly
interest rate, n = total payments.
Example mortgage costs
ยฃ250,000 at 5% over 25 yearsMonthly payment: ยฃ1,461 Total interest: ยฃ188,347 Total repaid: ยฃ438,347
ยฃ350,000 at 4.5% over 30 yearsMonthly payment:
ยฃ1,773 Total interest: ยฃ288,300 Total repaid: ยฃ638,300
LTV and how it affects your rate
Loan-to-Value (LTV) is the percentage of the property price you're borrowing. A lower LTV means lower
risk for lenders and better rates for you. The key thresholds are 90%, 85%, 80%, 75% and 60% LTV. Saving
to reach the next threshold can save you hundreds per month.