Payoff Logic

$950,000 Mortgage Payment

Principal & interest on a $950,000 loan runs $6,004.65/month at 6.5% over 30 years ($8,275.52 on a 15-year). Below: the payment at every rate from 5% to 8%, the income the standard ratios suggest, and a full calculator preloaded with this amount.

Monthly payment by rate ($950,000 loan)

Rate 30-year P&I 15-year P&I 30-yr total interest
5.00% $5,099.81 $7,512.54 $885,930
5.50% $5,394.00 $7,762.29 $991,838
6.00% $5,695.73 $8,016.64 $1,100,463
6.50% $6,004.65 $8,275.52 $1,211,673
7.00% $6,320.37 $8,538.87 $1,325,335
7.50% $6,642.54 $8,806.62 $1,441,314
8.00% $6,970.76 $9,078.69 $1,559,475

Principal & interest only — taxes, insurance, PMI, and HOA come on top. Highlighted row = the illustrative rate used in the text.

What $950,000 of mortgage really costs

A $950,000 mortgage is high-cost-metro territory — or a lot of house elsewhere. Note that $950,000 exceeds the baseline conforming loan limit ($806,500 for 2025; higher in designated high-cost counties), which makes this a jumbo loan for most buyers — jumbo rates and underwriting differ from conforming loans. At this size, an eighth of a point is real money: $78 a month.

The full monthly bill is more than principal and interest. If this loan is 80% of the home's price ($1,187,500 home), national-average property tax (1.1%/yr) adds about $1,089/month and average insurance ($2,341/yr) another $195 — bringing the realistic total to roughly $7,288/month. Under the classic 28% housing ratio, that suggests around $312,354 of household income. Local taxes change this a lot — see the state-by-state comparison.

Run your own numbers on a $950,000 loan

Preloaded as an 80%-LTV purchase ($1,187,500 price, 20% down). Adjust everything.

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20.0% of home price

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PMI applies automatically when your down payment is under 20% and drops off at 78% loan-to-value.

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Your estimated monthly payment

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Amortization schedule

Yearly totals — open any year for the month-by-month detail.

Frequently asked questions

How much is the monthly payment on a $950,000 mortgage?

At 6.5% on a 30-year fixed loan, principal and interest run $6,004.65 per month. With typical property taxes and insurance on top (assuming the loan is 80% of the home's price), the full monthly cost is roughly $7,288. On a 15-year term at the same rate the payment is $8,275.52. The table above shows every half-point from 5% to 8%.

How much income do I need for a $950,000 mortgage?

Using the standard 28% housing-ratio guideline and the full payment estimate above, you'd want roughly $312,354 of gross annual income ($26,030 per month). Less existing debt, a bigger down payment, or a lower rate all reduce that requirement — work your exact numbers in our home affordability calculator.

How much interest does a $950,000 mortgage cost over 30 years?

At 6.5%, total interest over a full 30-year schedule is about $1,211,673 — 128% of the amount borrowed. A 15-year term cuts that to about $539,594, and extra payments can remove years without changing the required payment.

Nearby amounts & tools

Compare: $900k mortgage payment · $1M mortgage payment — or every amount on the payments-by-amount index. Work backwards from income with the affordability calculator, or model extra payments in the extra-payment calculator.

Assumptions & sources: Payments computed with the standard amortization formula (engine verified against published examples — see the site repository). The 6.5% figure is illustrative, not an offer; tax/insurance estimates use national averages (1.1% effective property tax, $2,341/yr insurance — Bankrate 2025) and vary widely by location. Conforming-limit reference: FHFA 2025 baseline. Educational purposes only — see our Terms of Use.