Calculate your monthly PMI cost, find out when it drops off, and see exactly how much you'll save once private mortgage insurance is cancelled
Homebuyers putting less than 20% down on a conventional loan, current homeowners paying PMI who want to know when it ends, borrowers evaluating whether to put more money down
Calculate your monthly PMI cost, see the exact month PMI automatically cancels (at 78% LTV), and determine the total amount you'll pay in PMI over the life of the loan
$350K home with 10% down ($315K loan) at 0.5% PMI rate costs $131/month. PMI cancels at month 89 (year 7.4) once balance hits $280K — total PMI paid: $11,659
Key fact: PMI is required on conventional loans when your down payment is less than 20%. Unlike FHA mortgage insurance, conventional PMI automatically drops when you reach 20% equity — saving you hundreds per month.
$0
Added to your mortgage payment each month
—
When your balance reaches 80% of home value
$0
Monthly with PMI
$0
Monthly, no PMI
Enter your details above to see the comparison.
Understand your PMI cost and removal date in 4 steps
Input the purchase price and your down payment (as a dollar amount or percentage). PMI applies when your down payment is less than 20% of the home price on conventional loans.
Enter your interest rate and select your credit score range. Your credit score is the biggest factor in your PMI rate — a 760+ score can pay 3–5x less than a 620 score for the same loan.
See your exact monthly PMI charge, total payment, and how PMI fits into your overall housing cost. The payment bar shows PMI's share of your total monthly obligation.
The timeline shows when you can request PMI cancellation (80% LTV) and when it auto-cancels (78% LTV). Compare the 20% down scenario to decide whether saving a larger down payment makes sense.
Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI) is a type of insurance that protects your lender — not you — if you stop making payments on your loan. It is required by lenders on conventional loans whenever your down payment is less than 20% of the home's purchase price.
PMI allows lenders to safely approve loans with smaller down payments, which is why it exists as a bridge to homeownership for millions of buyers who can't yet save 20%. Without PMI programs, lenders would face too much risk on low-down-payment loans and would either refuse them or charge much higher interest rates.
The key advantage PMI has over FHA mortgage insurance: it goes away. Once your loan balance falls to 80% of your home's original value (through payments, extra paydown, or appreciation), you can request removal. At 78%, federal law requires automatic cancellation.
PMI rates vary based on several factors:
Typical range: 0.20%–2.00% of the loan amount annually, paid as a monthly addition to your mortgage payment.
Key facts to make the right decision for your situation
PMI pays your lender if you default — you get no direct benefit. But it enables you to buy with less than 20% down, getting you into a home years earlier. Think of it as the price of access, not wasted money.
At 80% LTV you can request PMI cancellation (must be in good standing). At 78% LTV your lender is required by law (Homeowners Protection Act) to automatically cancel PMI. No action needed at 78%.
If your home appreciates significantly, you may hit 80% LTV much sooner than scheduled. Get a new appraisal — if it shows 80%+ equity, you can request early PMI removal and start saving immediately.
A 760+ credit score on a $350K loan with 10% down pays roughly $55/month in PMI. The same borrower with a 620 score might pay $290/month — over $2,800/year more. Improving your score before buying can save thousands.
FHA MIP lasts the entire loan life (if less than 10% down). Conventional PMI drops at 20% equity. If your credit is 680+ and you have 5%+ down, conventional PMI almost always costs less over time than FHA's lifetime MIP.
An 80-10-10 loan (80% first mortgage + 10% HELOC + 10% down) eliminates PMI entirely. The second loan adds a payment but can cost less than PMI — especially as rates on the HELOC fall. Run the numbers for your situation.
Tools that work alongside this PMI calculator to give you the full picture
PMI (Private Mortgage Insurance) is required when you put less than 20% down on a conventional loan.
It protects the lender — not you — if you default on the loan. Think of it as the lender's cost of doing business on a higher-risk, lower-down-payment loan. Because you have less skin in the game, the lender faces more risk.
Why it exists: Without PMI, lenders would need to either reject low-down-payment loans or charge substantially higher interest rates. PMI allows lenders to approve these loans at competitive rates by transferring default risk to an insurance company.
Typical PMI costs:
The silver lining: Unlike FHA mortgage insurance, conventional PMI can be removed once you have enough equity. That makes it a temporary cost — not a permanent one — for most borrowers.
Three paths to PMI removal:
1. Request cancellation at 80% LTV (most common)
2. Automatic cancellation at 78% LTV (federal law)
3. Early removal via new appraisal (appreciation route)
Important: These rules apply to conventional loans only. FHA MIP has completely different (and less favorable) removal rules.
PMI is charged as an annual percentage of your loan amount, billed monthly.
Cost by credit score (30-year fixed, 10% down, $400K home, $360K loan):
Cost by down payment (680 credit score, $400K home):
Rule of thumb: Budget $50–$200/month per $100,000 borrowed at good credit, and more if your score is below 680.
Not always — it depends on how long PMI lasts vs. the opportunity cost of a larger down payment.
The break-even analysis:
When 20% down makes sense:
When to put less than 20% down:
Use this calculator's comparison section to see exactly how long it takes to break even for your specific numbers.
PMI is for conventional loans; MIP is for FHA loans — and the differences are significant.
| Feature | Conventional PMI | FHA MIP |
|---|---|---|
| Upfront cost | None (usually) | 1.75% of loan (rolled in) |
| Annual rate | 0.20%–2.00% | 0.55% (most loans) |
| Duration | Drops at 20% equity | Life of loan (<10% down) |
| Credit minimum | 620+ (most lenders) | 580+ for 3.5% down |
| Rate basis | Credit score + LTV | Fixed rate for all |
Who pays less over time?
Yes — several strategies can help you avoid PMI with less than 20% down:
1. Lender-Paid PMI (LPMI)
2. Piggyback Loan (80-10-10)
3. VA Loan (if eligible)
4. USDA Loan (rural properties)
5. Physician/Professional Loans
Tools that work well with this calculator