Guide · 4 min read

How mortgage amortization works

One fixed payment, a changing split. Amortization is the quiet engine that turns a loan into equity.

Amortization is the process that turns a large loan into a series of equal payments that end at exactly zero. With a fixed-rate mortgage the payment never changes, but what each payment does changes every single month.

The mechanism

Each month, the interest you owe is the current balance times the monthly rate. Whatever is left of your fixed payment after covering that interest goes to principal. Because that principal payment lowers the balance, next month's interest is a little smaller, so a little more goes to principal. Repeat that a few hundred times and the balance curves down to zero.

The crossover point

Early on, when the balance is high, most of your payment is interest. Late in the loan, when the balance is small, most of it is principal. Somewhere in between is the crossover point, the first month where principal exceeds interest. On a 30-year loan at today's rates it usually lands somewhere around years 17 to 20, and it arrives sooner when the rate is lower. Our calculator marks it on the balance chart.

Why the start feels slow

Many buyers are surprised how little the balance moves in the first few years. That is not a trick, it is just math: interest is charged on a large balance, so the principal share is small at first. It is also why extra payments early in the loan are so powerful. A dollar of extra principal now removes interest from every remaining month.

Reading your schedule

An amortization schedule lists all of this, one row per payment. It tells you the balance at any point, the exact month PMI can come off, and how much interest you will have paid by a given year. It is worth a look before you sign.

Questions & answers
Why does my balance barely move at first?
Because interest is charged on the full balance early on, most of your payment covers interest and only a little reduces principal. The principal share grows steadily as the balance falls.
What is the crossover point?
The first month where more of your payment goes to principal than to interest. On a 30-year loan at current rates it typically arrives around years 17 to 20.
MF
Marcus Fielding· Mortgage analyst & editor
Published June 2026 · Updated July 2026
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