Payoff Logic

Vermont Mortgage Calculator

Preloaded with Vermont's real numbers — a 1.71% average effective property tax rate (4th highest of the 50 states), about $1,000/year for homeowners insurance, and the $385,000 typical Vermont home value. Every field stays editable.

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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

Loan amount

Total interest paid

Payoff date

Loan balance over time

Amortization schedule

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

Buying in Vermont: what the numbers look like

Property taxes are the line to watch in Vermont: at an average effective 1.71% — 4th highest in the country versus a ~0.94% national average — the typical $385,000 home carries roughly $6,584 a year ($549 per month) in tax before you've paid a dollar of principal. On the insurance side, Vermont homeowners average about $1,000 a year — a bargain at 63% below the 50-state average.

Put together at an illustrative 6.5% rate (30-year, 20% down), the typical Vermont purchase pencils out near $2,579/month: $1,947 principal & interest + $549 tax + $83 insurance. That's the number the calculator above starts from — swap in your real price, rate quote, and county figures to make it yours.

Property taxes & closing costs in Vermont

Education property taxes are income-sensitized for many resident homeowners — the sticker rate overstates what lower-income households pay.

Transfer tax: Property transfer tax of 1.25% (0.5% on the first $100k of a primary residence). Closing costs also include lender, title, and recording fees — typically 2–5% of the price all-in.

Vermont at a glance

Typical home value (Zillow, 2025)$385,000 (22nd highest)
Avg. effective property tax (2023)1.71% ≈ $549/mo
Avg. home insurance (2025)$1,000/yr ≈ $83/mo
Example payment (typical home, 6.5%, 20% down)$2,579/mo

Frequently asked questions

How much is the mortgage payment on a typical Vermont home?

The typical Vermont home runs about $385,000 (Zillow, 2025). With 20% down ($77,000) on a 30-year loan at an illustrative 6.5% rate, the full monthly payment is roughly $2,579 — $1,947 principal & interest, $549 property tax, and $83 insurance. Adjust every input above to match your own price and quote.

What is the property tax rate in Vermont?

Vermont's average effective rate is 1.71% of home value — the 4th highest in the nation (Tax Foundation, 2023 data). On the typical $385,000 home that is about $6,584 per year. Education property taxes are income-sensitized for many resident homeowners — the sticker rate overstates what lower-income households pay.

How much is homeowners insurance in Vermont?

Roughly $1,000 per year on average for $300k of dwelling coverage (Bankrate, 2025) — below the 50-state average of $2,682. Your premium depends on the home’s age, construction, claims history, and coverage limits, so quote several insurers.

Nearby states & more tools

Compare: New Hampshire mortgage calculator · New York mortgage calculator · Massachusetts mortgage calculator · Maine mortgage calculator — or see all 50 states compared.

Not sure of your price range? Start with the home affordability calculator, then fine-tune here. The full mortgage calculator has extra payments and PMI controls too.

Data & sources: Property tax — Effective property tax rate on owner-occupied housing, calendar year 2023 (Tax Foundation analysis of Census ACS data, published 2025). Home value — Typical home value, Zillow Home Value Index (ZHVI), 2025, rounded to the nearest $5,000. Insurance — Average annual homeowners insurance premium for $300k dwelling coverage (Bankrate/Quadrant 2025), rounded to the nearest $50. State-level figures are planning defaults, not quotes: property taxes vary by county and city, insurance varies by home and insurer, and home values move monthly. Every value prefills the calculator but remains editable. The 6.5% rate is illustrative, not an offer or a prediction — always enter a real quote.

Disclaimer: Educational purposes only — not financial advice. See our Terms of Use.