See how much you'll save by switching to biweekly mortgage payments
Homeowners with an existing mortgage looking to pay off faster without a large budget change, and borrowers paid on a biweekly schedule.
Calculate how much interest you save and how many years you cut off your loan by paying half your monthly payment every two weeks — which adds one extra full payment per year.
On a $320K, 30-year loan at 6.75%, switching to biweekly payments saves ~$68,000 in interest and pays off the loan 4.5 years early — with no change to your monthly budget.
💡 Magic of Biweekly: Making half-payment every 2 weeks = 26 payments/year = 13 monthly payments vs 12. Extra payment goes directly to principal!
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Total interest savings
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Pay off mortgage earlier
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30 years
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26.5 years
A biweekly mortgage payment plan splits your monthly payment in half and pays that amount every two weeks. Because there are 52 weeks in a year, you end up making 26 half-payments — the equivalent of 13 full monthly payments instead of 12. That one extra payment per year goes entirely toward principal, compounding interest savings over the life of the loan.
On a $320,000 loan at 7% for 30 years, the standard monthly payment is $2,129. Switching to biweekly ($1,065 every two weeks) reduces the loan term by roughly 4.5 years and saves approximately $76,000 in total interest — without refinancing or changing the loan terms.
Interest on a mortgage is calculated on the outstanding balance. Every time you make a biweekly payment, you reduce the balance slightly faster than a monthly schedule would. That lower balance means less interest accrues the following period. This effect compounds month after month for decades, creating outsized savings from what feels like a modest change in payment timing.
Biweekly payments work best for borrowers who receive paychecks every two weeks (which aligns with the payment schedule), want to pay off their mortgage faster without refinancing, and have no high-interest debt that would be a better use of the extra payment. If your interest rate is below 4%, investing the extra payment may yield better returns.
The difference between monthly and biweekly payments may seem small, but the long-term impact is substantial. Here is a direct comparison on a $320,000 loan at 7% for 30 years:
Many lenders offer a biweekly program, sometimes for a small fee. Alternatively, you can replicate the effect yourself by making one extra payment per year (divide your monthly payment by 12 and add that amount to each monthly payment). Both methods produce similar savings — the DIY approach avoids any program fees.
Some third-party companies charge $300–$500 to set up biweekly payments plus monthly fees. These services are unnecessary — you can achieve the same result by simply adding 1/12 of your payment to each month's check and marking it "principal only." Always verify with your lender that extra payments are applied directly to principal.
Why paying every two weeks beats monthly
Monthly: 12 payments/year. Biweekly: 26 half-payments = 13 full payments. That extra payment goes 100% to principal, saving huge interest.
$300K loan at 7%: Save $76K interest, pay off 3.5 years early. $500K loan: Save $127K, finish 3.8 years sooner. Bigger loan = bigger savings.
Biweekly payment is half your monthly. If paid biweekly like your paycheck, you barely notice. Budget-friendly way to accelerate payoff.
Some lenders offer free biweekly programs. Others charge $300-500 setup. Watch out for scams - can DIY with autopay from checking account.
Unlike refinancing, can stop anytime. No fees, no credit check, no closing costs. Start/stop as budget allows. Total control.
Each biweekly payment hits 2 weeks earlier than monthly. Over 30 years, this timing difference creates massive compounding savings on interest.
Two reasons: Extra payment + earlier payment timing.
Reason 1: The 13th payment
Example: $320K loan at 7% for 30 years
Monthly payments:
Biweekly payments:
Reason 2: Earlier payment timing
Combined effect over 30 years:
Why it compounds:
Yes! And it's almost as good - saves 95% of the biweekly benefit.
Option A: True biweekly (26 payments/year)
Option B: Monthly + annual extra payment
Option C: Monthly + 1/12 extra each month
Why biweekly slightly better:
When annual payment better:
When 1/12 extra monthly better:
The key insight:
Most lenders allow it, but watch out for fees and gotchas:
Free biweekly programs:
Fee-based biweekly programs:
DIY biweekly (recommended):
Method 1: Manual biweekly
Method 2: Monthly + extra
Method 3: True DIY biweekly
Important gotchas:
1. Payment application timing
2. "Principal only" marking
3. Prepayment penalties
Best approach:
Depends on your mortgage rate vs investment returns:
Quick decision rule:
Example: $320K loan at 7% for 30 years
Option A: Biweekly payments
Option B: Invest that $2,129/year
Comparison:
But consider the risks:
Biweekly advantages:
Investing advantages:
Investing disadvantages:
Best strategy by rate:
7%+ mortgage:
4-6.99% mortgage:
Under 4% mortgage:
The "sleep well" factor:
My recommendation:
You don't need to start with full biweekly - any extra helps!
Flexible strategies:
1. Start small - add $50/month
2. Increase gradually
3. Windfall strategy
4. Round-up method
5. Annual payment only
Real example - couple starting small:
Year 1-2: Added $50/month
Year 3: Got raises, added $100/month
Year 4-5: Had baby, paused extra payments
Year 6+: Back to $150/month extra
Key principles:
Don't let perfect be enemy of good:
Biweekly benefits vary by loan type and situation:
BEST for:
1. High-rate loans (7%+)
2. Large loan balances
3. Early in loan term
4. 30-year loans
MODERATE benefit:
1. Mid-rate loans (5-6.99%)
2. FHA/VA loans with MIP
3. Jumbo loans
LEAST benefit:
1. Very low rate loans (under 4%)
2. 15-year loans
3. Late in loan (20+ years paid)
4. Adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs)
Special considerations:
Interest-only loans:
Loans with prepayment penalty:
Bottom line:
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