Updated Friday, April 3, 2026 30-Yr Fixed6.34%– 0.00 | 15-Yr Fixed5.69%– 0.00 | FHA 30-Yr6.10%↓ -0.34 | VA 30-Yr6.27%↓ -0.24 | 5/1 ARM6.14%↑ +0.02

15-Year vs. 30-Year: Higher Payments, Massive Interest Savings

Compare 15-year and 30-year fixed mortgages. See the exact payment difference, total interest saved, and which term fits your financial goals. The math might surprise you.

15-Year vs. 30-Year: The Numbers

A 15-year mortgage has higher monthly payments but saves a staggering amount in interest. On a $400,000 loan, the difference in total interest paid can exceed $200,000. Here is a real-world comparison using current-range rates:

Feature15-Year Fixed30-Year Fixed
Typical Rate~5.90%~6.50%
Monthly P&I ($400K loan)$3,357$2,528
Total Interest Paid$204,260$510,080
Total Cost (P+I)$604,260$910,080
Interest Savings$305,820 saved with 15-year

Key Differences

Monthly Payment
The 15-year payment is about 33% higher. In the example above, that is $829 more per month. You need sufficient income to comfortably handle the higher payment.
Interest Rate
15-year rates are typically 0.50%–0.75% lower than 30-year rates. This compounds the savings — you pay a lower rate on a loan that amortizes faster.
Equity Building
With a 15-year mortgage, you build equity dramatically faster. After 5 years, you will have paid off roughly 28% of the principal vs. only 8% with a 30-year loan.
Total Interest
The 30-year loan costs 2.5x more in interest. Over the life of the loan, you pay the equivalent of buying the house twice with a 30-year vs. 1.5x with a 15-year.
Financial Flexibility
The 30-year's lower required payment gives you more monthly flexibility. You can always pay extra toward a 30-year to mimic a 15-year payoff — but you are not locked in.

When to Choose 15-Year

15-Year Is Best When...
  • The higher payment is comfortable — should be no more than 25% of gross income
  • You are mid-career or older — want the home paid off before retirement
  • You want to build wealth faster — forced equity building accelerates net worth
  • You are refinancing — dropping from a 30-year to 15-year maximizes refi savings

When to Choose 30-Year

30-Year Is Best When...
  • You need the lower payment to qualify — the DTI math works better at lower payments
  • You want maximum flexibility — can pay extra when able, minimum when needed
  • You would invest the difference — if stock market returns exceed your mortgage rate, 30-year + investing may win
  • You are a first-time buyer — lower payments ease the transition to homeownership

The Hybrid Strategy

Many financial advisors recommend taking a 30-year mortgage but making extra payments as if it were a 15-year. This gives you the safety net of a lower required payment while still building equity quickly. If an emergency arises, you can drop back to the minimum 30-year payment. The tradeoff: you will pay a slightly higher interest rate than a true 15-year loan.

The Bottom Line

If you can comfortably afford the higher payment, the 15-year mortgage is the clear mathematical winner — saving $200,000–$300,000+ in interest on a typical loan. But if the higher payment would strain your budget, the 30-year provides needed flexibility. Use our mortgage calculator to compare both options with your specific numbers.

Check rates: 15-year rates vs. 30-year rates. Use our amortization schedule to see the full payment breakdown for each term.

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