Mortgage Calculators That Actually Help

Estimate your payment, compare loan options, or see your refinance savings. Free, with no email required.

This mortgage calculator gives Northern Arizona buyers and homeowners a real, instant estimate to make educated decisions.

Every buyer and homeowner is working through a different question. Should you keep renting or buy now? Fifteen years or thirty? Is that builder’s buydown offer actually worth it? We built a calculator for each one, plus tools for refinancing and home equity, so you get a real answer instead of a guess.

Monthly Payment

Estimate your monthly mortgage payment including principal and interest.

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Enter a rate you've been quoted, or one you're planning around. Your loan officer can provide an accurate quote based on your credit and loan profile.
Whole numbers only, 1–30 years.
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PMI is insurance that protects your lender if you stop making payments. It's required when your down payment is less than 20% — except on VA loans, which never require PMI. Typically 0.5%–1.5% annually.
Enter your numbers above and click Calculate to see results.

Important Disclosures — Please Read

Calculator Limitations. The calculations produced by these tools are based solely on the numbers you enter and are provided for illustrative and educational purposes only. They do not constitute a mortgage application, a pre-qualification, a pre-approval, a loan commitment, or an offer to lend. Mountain Country Mortgage, a DBA of Lender Express Mortgage LLC, makes no representation that any result reflects your actual borrowing capacity, qualification status, or available loan terms.

Rates, Costs, and Terms. Interest rates, annual percentage rates (APR), closing costs, and loan terms shown in any example are illustrative only and are not guaranteed. Actual rates and terms are determined at the time of loan application and are subject to change based on market conditions, lender guidelines, and individual borrower eligibility. Your actual rate may be higher or lower than any figure used in these calculators.

Payment Estimates. Monthly payment figures shown represent principal and interest only unless you have entered additional amounts for property taxes, homeowners insurance, or mortgage insurance. Your actual monthly obligation will be higher once taxes, insurance, HOA dues (if applicable), and any required mortgage insurance premiums are included. Escrow requirements vary by loan program and lender.

Refinance Considerations. Refinancing an existing mortgage may reduce your monthly payment but could increase the total finance charges paid over the life of the loan, particularly if the new loan term is longer than the remaining term on your current loan. A licensed loan officer can help you evaluate the full cost and benefit of refinancing for your specific situation.

Qualification Requirements. Loan qualification depends on numerous factors including but not limited to credit score, debt-to-income ratio, employment history, property type, appraised value, and available down payment. Not all borrowers will qualify for all loan programs. Results produced by the Pre-Qualification Estimator are estimates based on general DTI guidelines and do not account for all underwriting criteria.

Loan Estimate. Under federal law, you have the right to receive a Loan Estimate within three business days of submitting a complete mortgage application. The Loan Estimate will provide binding disclosures of your interest rate, monthly payment, and closing costs. You should review and compare Loan Estimates before selecting a loan. These calculators do not replace a Loan Estimate.

Illustrative Payment Example. For reference: a borrower purchasing a home at $450,000 with a 20% down payment results in a loan amount of $360,000. At a fixed interest rate of 6.500% for a 30-year term with assumed origination charges of 3% of the loan amount ($10,800), the Annual Percentage Rate (APR) would be 6.795%, and the estimated monthly principal and interest payment would be $2,275. This example does not include property taxes, homeowners insurance, or mortgage insurance, which are required and will increase your monthly payment. APR and payment example are for illustrative purposes only, assume a specific origination charge that may not reflect your actual loan costs, and do not represent a current offer or commitment to lend. Actual APR will vary based on your loan amount, interest rate, loan term, and the specific fees applicable to your transaction. The illustrative payment example above applies to all calculators on this page. All payment figures displayed are hypothetical estimates based on borrower-entered inputs and the same disclosure terms apply regardless of which calculator is used.

Northern Arizona Mortgage Calculator Guide

A closer look at the mortgage calculators, with details specific to buying or refinancing in Northern Arizona.

Monthly Payment Calculator for Northern Arizona Homes

This calculator tells you what your total monthly payment will actually be, not just principal and interest.

Enter your home price, down payment, interest rate, and loan term. Add your estimated property tax and homeowners insurance too. Most first-time buyers forget these two costs. Then they feel surprised when their real payment lands higher than the lender’s first quote.

Say you are eyeing a $475,000 home in Flagstaff. Put down 10%, finance $427,500 at 6.5% on a 30-year loan. Principal and interest comes to about $2,700 a month. Add Coconino County property tax and a wildfire-area insurance estimate, and your real payment climbs closer to $3,300.

Switch to the Amortization tab to see your full payment schedule, month by month. It shows how much of each payment goes to principal versus interest. It also shows your remaining balance at any point in the loan. On a $350,000 loan at 6.5% over 30 years, total interest comes to about $446,000 by payoff. That is almost as much as the loan itself.

Use this calculator any time you have a specific home price in mind. It works for any price, whether you are shopping in a higher-cost market like Flagstaff or Sedona. It works just as well in a more affordable market like Kingman or St. Johns.

Coconino and Yavapai counties carry higher conforming loan limits than most of the country. This can change your loan type and down payment math. A local loan officer can confirm the current limit for your county.

You can enter a mortgage insurance rate if your down payment is below 20% on a conventional loan, since PMI applies until you build enough equity. HOA dues are not part of this calculator. Homes in planned communities across the Prescott area often carry them, so add that cost separately before you finalize your budget.

Rent vs. Buy Calculator for Northern Arizona Renters

This calculator compares your true net cost of buying against your total cost of renting. It looks at the years you actually plan to stay, not just this month’s payment.

Enter your current rent and expected rent increase, plus your home price, down payment, and loan details. Add your expected home appreciation rate, how many years you plan to stay, and your selling costs when you sell. Also add your combined state and federal tax rate.

The calculator adds up everything you pay to buy. That includes your monthly payment over the years you stay, your down payment, and closing costs. Then it subtracts what you get back. That includes the equity you would have if you sold, based on your appreciation assumption, minus selling costs. It also adds an estimated tax benefit from mortgage interest. That net number is your real cost to buy. It compares that against every dollar of rent you would have paid over the same years. Rent is money you never get back.

Picture a $400,000 home with $80,000 down at a 6.5% rate. Starting rent is $2,200 a month, rising 3% a year. Stay seven years, and the numbers tell a clear story. Your net cost to buy comes to about $71,600. Renting over the same seven years costs about $202,300 in straight rent payments, money you never see again. Buying comes out about $130,600 ahead. Your monthly buy payment runs higher than your starting rent, but the equity and tax benefit make up the difference.

This tool helps if you are on the fence about buying now or waiting. It matters everywhere in Northern Arizona. Maybe you are watching fast-rising rents in Flagstaff and the Verde Valley. Maybe you are in a steadier market like Kingman or St. Johns.

This comparison does not include home maintenance and repair costs, or what your down payment could earn if invested elsewhere instead. Budget around 1% of your home’s value per year for upkeep. That is a real cost of owning, even when it does not show up on your mortgage statement.

Pre-Qualification Calculator: What Home Price Can You Afford?

This calculator gives you two numbers, not one. It shows the maximum home price you could qualify for, and a separate estimate built around a monthly payment you actually choose.

Enter your gross monthly income, your current debts, and how much you have for a down payment. Choose a comfortable target payment, and the calculator works backward to your maximum loan amount.

Seeing both matters. The maximum qualifying number comes from standard lending guidelines, and it is usually higher than what feels comfortable month to month. The target payment number starts with a number you pick, so it reflects what actually fits your budget. Comparing the two shows the real gap between what a lender might approve and what you would actually want to pay.

A household earning $9,000 a month, with $600 in debt and $40,000 down, could qualify for a maximum price near $420,000. That figure comes from standard lending guidelines, the ceiling a lender might approve. The same household might choose a target payment of $2,600 a month instead. That points to a more comfortable home price closer to $365,000. The $55,000 gap is the buffer between what a lender could approve and what actually fits the household’s budget.

Run this before you start touring homes in Flagstaff, Prescott, or Lake Havasu City. Knowing your real range keeps you from falling for a home outside your budget. It also keeps you from underestimating what you can actually afford.

Keep in mind, pre-qualification is not the same as pre-approval. Pre-qualification gives you a fast estimate based on the numbers you enter. Pre-approval involves a lender verifying your income, assets, and credit, and it carries more weight with home sellers. Use this calculator to get your range, then talk to a loan officer about a full pre-approval before you make an offer.

Rent vs. Buy Calculator for Northern Arizona Renters

This calculator compares your true net cost of buying against your total cost of renting. It looks at the years you actually plan to stay, not just this month’s payment.

Enter your current rent and expected rent increase, plus your home price, down payment, and loan details. Add your expected home appreciation rate, how many years you plan to stay, and your selling costs when you sell. Also add your combined state and federal tax rate.

The calculator adds up everything you pay to buy. That includes your monthly payment over the years you stay, your down payment, and closing costs. Then it subtracts what you get back. That includes the equity you would have if you sold, based on your appreciation assumption, minus selling costs. It also adds an estimated tax benefit from mortgage interest. That net number is your real cost to buy. It compares that against every dollar of rent you would have paid over the same years. Rent is money you never get back.

Picture a $400,000 home with $80,000 down at a 6.5% rate. Starting rent is $2,200 a month, rising 3% a year. Stay seven years, and the numbers tell a clear story. Your net cost to buy comes to about $71,600. Renting over the same seven years costs about $202,300 in straight rent payments, money you never see again. Buying comes out about $130,600 ahead. Your monthly buy payment runs higher than your starting rent, but the equity and tax benefit make up the difference.

This tool helps if you are on the fence about buying now or waiting. It matters everywhere in Northern Arizona. Maybe you are watching fast-rising rents in Flagstaff and the Verde Valley. Maybe you are in a steadier market like Kingman or St. Johns.

This comparison does not include home maintenance and repair costs, or what your down payment could earn if invested elsewhere instead. Budget around 1% of your home’s value per year for upkeep. That is a real cost of owning, even when it does not show up on your mortgage statement.

Pre-Qualification Calculator: What Home Price Can You Afford?

This calculator gives you two numbers, not one. It shows the maximum home price you could qualify for, and a separate estimate built around a monthly payment you actually choose.

Enter your gross monthly income, your current debts, and how much you have for a down payment. Choose a comfortable target payment, and the calculator works backward to your maximum loan amount.

Seeing both matters. The maximum qualifying number comes from standard lending guidelines, and it is usually higher than what feels comfortable month to month. The target payment number starts with a number you pick, so it reflects what actually fits your budget. Comparing the two shows the real gap between what a lender might approve and what you would actually want to pay.

A household earning $9,000 a month, with $600 in debt and $40,000 down, could qualify for a maximum price near $420,000. That figure comes from standard lending guidelines, the ceiling a lender might approve. The same household might choose a target payment of $2,600 a month instead. That points to a more comfortable home price closer to $365,000. The $55,000 gap is the buffer between what a lender could approve and what actually fits the household’s budget.

Run this before you start touring homes in Flagstaff, Prescott, or Lake Havasu City. Knowing your real range keeps you from falling for a home outside your budget. It also keeps you from underestimating what you can actually afford.

Keep in mind, pre-qualification is not the same as pre-approval. Pre-qualification gives you a fast estimate based on the numbers you enter. Pre-approval involves a lender verifying your income, assets, and credit, and it carries more weight with home sellers. Use this calculator to get your range, then talk to a loan officer about a full pre-approval before you make an offer.

15 vs. 30 Year Mortgage Calculator

This calculator shows exactly what you give up, and what you gain, by choosing a 15-year loan over a 30-year loan.

Enter your loan amount and the rate for each term, plus your property tax and insurance. Add how many years you plan to stay, since that is what the comparison is really built around.

Full-term totals only tell part of the story. This calculator also shows exactly where each loan stands at your own timeline. You will see your remaining balance under each loan at that point, how much extra equity the 15-year loan has built by then, and how much interest each loan has cost you so far.

On a $350,000 loan, a 15-year loan at 5.875% runs about $2,920 a month. A 30-year loan at 6.5% runs closer to $2,210 a month, several hundred dollars lower. Stay seven years, and the 15-year loan already owes roughly $85,000 less than the 30-year loan. Over the full term, the 15-year path saves more than $190,000 in interest.

This helps first-time buyers across Northern Arizona weigh a lower payment against long-term savings, from Flagstaff to Kingman. It also helps anyone refinancing decide which term actually fits their goals.

There is a middle path too. Many buyers choose a 30-year loan for the lower required payment, then make extra principal payments when they can. That approach keeps the payment flexible in a lean month, and still cuts years off the loan when the budget allows.

Bi-Weekly Mortgage Payment Calculator

This calculator shows how much faster you could pay off your current mortgage, and how much interest you would save, by switching to a bi-weekly payment schedule.

Enter your original loan amount and term, plus your current balance and rate. Add how many years you plan to stay, and the calculator shows your equity position under each payment schedule at that point.

Picture a mortgage that started at $400,000 on a 30-year term. Your current balance has come down to $320,000 at a 6.5% rate. Switch to bi-weekly payments today, and you could pay off the loan years earlier and save tens of thousands in interest, compared to staying on your regular monthly schedule.

You do not need a special program to get this benefit. Many homeowners simply set aside half their payment every two weeks and send one extra payment a year on their own. Some loan servicers offer official bi-weekly plans, but ask about setup fees first. You can get the same result for free with a little discipline.

This works for anyone already paying a mortgage in Northern Arizona, whether you financed in Flagstaff or Kingman. It fits homeowners who want to pay down their loan faster without refinancing or changing their budget much.

Mortgage Buydown Calculator

This calculator shows your reduced payment during a temporary buydown, and exactly when it steps back up to your full rate.

Choose a buydown structure, like a 2-1 buydown, enter your loan amount and permanent rate, and see your payment schedule year by year.

On a $400,000 loan at a 6.75% permanent rate, a 2-1 buydown drops your first-year rate to 4.75%. That cuts roughly $530 off your monthly payment. Year two, the rate rises to 5.75%. By year three, you are paying the full 6.75% rate.

Buydowns show up often in new construction deals across Prescott Valley and the Flagstaff area. Builders often fund the difference to help close the sale. Run the numbers before you assume the incentive is worth it.

Ask who is actually funding the buydown before you agree to a higher purchase price to cover it. Some builders quietly add the cost of the buydown into the price of the home. A loan officer can help you compare the true cost against simply asking for a lower price instead.

Refinance Calculator: Rate and Term

This calculator compares your current loan to a new rate and term, so you see the real savings, not just a lower rate on paper.

Enter your current balance, rate, and remaining term. Add the new rate and term you have been quoted, plus your estimated closing costs.

Say your current balance is $320,000 at 7.25%, with 25 years left. Refinancing into a 6.25% rate on a new 30-year term could drop your payment by around $280 a month. With $4,500 in closing costs, you would break even in about 16 months.

This fits homeowners who want a lower payment, a shorter term, or both. Run it before you assume today’s rates make refinancing worth the closing costs.

Refinancing is not always worth it. If you plan to move within a couple of years, the closing costs may cost more than what you save. Run the break-even math first, then weigh it against how long you plan to stay in the home.

Cash-Out Refinance Calculator

This calculator shows what a cash-out refinance actually costs you, in exchange for the equity you pull out at closing.

Enter your home value, current loan balance, and the cash amount you want. The calculator applies typical loan-to-value limits and shows your new loan amount and payment.

A home worth $500,000 with a $280,000 balance has real room to work with. Pulling out $60,000 in cash brings your new loan to $340,000. At a 6.75% rate, your new payment lands around $2,205 a month, up from your original payment.

Homeowners across Northern Arizona, from Flagstaff to Kingman, have built real equity as home values climbed. This tool helps you see the tradeoff before you decide how much cash to pull out.

Cash-out refinances usually carry a slightly higher rate than a standard rate and term refinance. Lenders see the larger loan amount as more risk. Many homeowners still use this option to fund renovations, cover education costs, or consolidate higher-rate debt into one lower payment.

Home Equity Calculator: Loans and HELOCs

This calculator shows how much equity you can access, then compares a home equity loan against a HELOC side by side.

Enter your home value and current mortgage balance to see your total equity, plus what is available at typical 80% and 90% loan-to-value limits. Choose to compare a home equity loan, a HELOC, or both at the same amount. You can also list out any credit cards or loans you are carrying.

A home equity loan gives you a fixed rate and a predictable payment. A HELOC works more like a credit card. During the draw period, you typically pay interest only. A repayment period follows once the draw ends. You can also add existing credit cards or loans. See how paying them off with your equity compares to keeping them as is.

A home worth $450,000 with a $275,000 mortgage balance holds $175,000 in equity. Most lenders cap borrowing at 80% of your home’s value, which leaves about $85,000 available. Some programs allow up to 90%, which opens up roughly $130,000 instead. Borrowing $50,000 through a home equity loan at a fixed rate gives you a predictable payment. The same amount through a HELOC gives you flexibility during the draw period, but your rate can move.

The debt consolidation section shows the real payoff. Add each debt separately, a credit card at 18.99%, another at 29%, a personal loan at 10%, along with its balance and current payment. On $40,000 in combined debt costing $878 a month, using your equity could lower that to around $544 a month and save well over $145,000 in interest by the time everything is paid off.

This is a common tool for homeowners across our Northern Arizona service area. That includes Coconino, Yavapai, Navajo, Apache, and Mohave counties, whether you are funding renovations or consolidating higher-rate debt. If you have credit cards or other loans, add them in to see how paying them off with your equity compares to keeping them as is.

Debt consolidation through home equity moves unsecured debt onto your home. Falling behind on a credit card does not put your house at risk. Once that balance is rolled into a home equity loan or HELOC, missing payments does. Borrow only what you need, and compare the total cost before you decide.

Calculator FAQs

What Northern Arizona buyers and homeowners ask before they trust the numbers.

It is accurate for any price you enter, but Flagstaff and Sedona run well above the national median, so use your real target price for a useful estimate.

Coconino and Yavapai counties also carry higher conforming loan limits than most of the country, which can affect your down payment and loan type. A local loan officer can confirm the current limit for your county.

Yes. You can adjust the property tax amount and homeowners insurance estimate to match your county and your home.

Homes in wildfire-prone areas of Coconino and Yavapai counties sometimes carry higher insurance costs. Build in a buffer if you are shopping in those areas.

The rate and term calculator estimates savings from a lower rate or a new term on your existing balance. The cash-out calculator estimates a larger loan that pays you the difference in cash.

Not sure which one fits your goal? Start with rate and term if you just want a lower payment. Start with cash-out if you want to access equity for renovations, debt payoff, or another use.

Yes. Run the Pre-Qualification calculator for a quick estimate, then ask a loan officer about USDA eligibility for your specific address.

Much of rural Apache County qualifies for USDA financing with no down payment. Browse our loan programs for details, or connect with a loan officer who knows the area.

No. We are licensed to do loans across all of Arizona, including the Phoenix metro area.

Our office is rooted in Flagstaff, and we focus on Northern Arizona, including Coconino, Yavapai, Navajo, Apache, and Mohave counties. If you are buying or refinancing in the Phoenix metro area, our team can help there too.

No. The calculator runs in your browser, and nothing you enter is saved or sent to us.

If you want a loan officer to review your numbers, you can share them yourself when you reach out.

The Pre-Qualification calculator shows a Maximum Qualifying number and a Target Payment number because they answer two different questions.

Maximum Qualifying is based on standard debt-to-income guidelines, the highest price a lender might approve. Target Payment starts with a monthly payment you choose, so it reflects what actually fits your budget. Comparing both shows the real gap between what you could borrow and what you would actually want to pay.

A home equity loan gives you a fixed rate, a lump sum, and a predictable monthly payment. A HELOC works more like a credit card.

During the draw period, you typically pay interest only. A repayment period follows after that. Use the Home Equity calculator to compare both side by side using your own numbers, or run each one separately.

Yes. The Home Equity calculator includes a debt consolidation feature built for exactly this.

Add each credit card or loan you are carrying, along with its balance, interest rate, and current payment. The calculator compares your current combined payment and total interest against what you could pay instead using a home equity loan or HELOC. Keep in mind, this moves unsecured debt onto your home, so missed payments carry more risk than an unpaid credit card.