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The Loan Amortization Formula Explained

6 min read May 9, 2026By TheCalcUniverse Editorial

Your monthly payment is not pulled from thin air. It comes from a specific mathematical formula. Here is how the amortization formula works.


The Formula

M = P [ r(1+r)^n ] / [ (1+r)^n - 1 ] where M is the monthly payment, P is the principal, r is the monthly interest rate (annual rate / 12), and n is the number of payments (loan term in months). For a $300,000 mortgage at 6% for 30 years: P = 300,000, r = 0.005, n = 360. This gives M = 300,000 [ 0.005(1.005)^360 ] / [ (1.005)^360 - 1 ] = $1,798.65.

What Each Variable Does

A higher principal (P) increases the payment proportionally. A higher rate (r) increases both the payment and the total interest dramatically. A longer term (n) reduces the payment but increases total interest paid. Doubling the rate from 4% to 8% increases the payment by about 45% but doubles the total interest.

Calculate Your Payment

Use our amortization calculator to see the formula in action.

Written by

TheCalcUniverse Editorial

Finance & Analytics Team

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