Snowballr provides financial education, not investment advice. Verify any advisor on FINRA BrokerCheck.
Snowballr
More
GuidesProtect your moneyScenariosEmbed on your site
Free · No sign-up required
Mortgage Payment Example

$1,000,000 Mortgage at 6% for 15 Years: Monthly Payment & Total Cost

Short answer

Monthly P&I payment: $8,439. Total interest over the 15-year loan: $518,942. Total repaid: $1,518,942 on the original $1,000,000 — meaning you will pay back 1.52× the loan amount over the full term.

The $8,439 figure covers principal and interest only. Property taxes, homeowners insurance, and (for loans with less than 20% down) PMI are typically added on top, often bringing the total monthly housing payment 20–30% higher.

By Snowballr Editorial Team
Last reviewed May 10, 2026Fact-checked against primary sourcesEditorial standards

The numbers

Loan amount$1,000,000
Interest rate (APR)6%
Loan term15 years (180 months)
Monthly P&I payment$8,439
Total interest over loan life$518,942
Total amount repaid$1,518,942
Cost ratio (total / loan)1.52×

Equity build-up

Mortgage payments shift gradually from mostly-interest to mostly-principal as the balance shrinks. In year 1 of this loan, the $8,439 payment is mostly interest. By year 7, the principal share dominates. Here is how your equity grows over time:

Equity after 5 years$239,909
Remaining balance after 5 years$760,091
Interest paid in first 5 years$266,405
Equity after 10 years$563,510
Remaining balance after 10 years$436,490
Interest paid in first 10 years$449,118

How to pay off this mortgage faster

Three common acceleration strategies for the $1,000,000-at-6%-for-15-year scenario:

Baseline ($8,439/month)15 years · $518,942 interest
+$100/month ($8,539 total)14y 9m · saves $10,904
+$200/month ($8,639 total)14y 6m · saves $21,344
Biweekly equivalent (1 extra payment/year)13y 3m · saves $67,759

The biweekly hack works because there are 26 fortnights in a year, so paying half your monthly amount every two weeks results in 13 full payments annually instead of 12. The 13th payment goes entirely to principal. You can replicate this manually by dividing your monthly payment by 12 and adding it to each month's payment — no need for a paid biweekly program.

Year-by-year amortization

Showing every year through year 5, then every 5 years. Notice how the interest-vs-principal split shifts: early payments are mostly interest, later payments are mostly principal.

YearYear-end balanceInterest this yearPrincipal this year
1$957,583$58,846$42,417
2$912,550$56,230$45,033
3$864,740$53,452$47,810
4$813,981$50,504$50,759
5$760,091$47,373$53,890
10$436,490$28,573$72,689
15$0$3,216$98,047

The math

Standard fixed-rate mortgage amortization uses the formula M = P × (r × (1 + r)n) / ((1 + r)n − 1), where M is the monthly P&I payment, P is the principal ($1,000,000), r is the monthly rate (0.005000 for 6% APR), and n is the total number of monthly payments (180 for a 15-year loan). Plugging in: M = $1,000,000 × (0.005000 × (1.005000)180) / (...) = $8,439.

What about taxes, insurance, and PMI?

The $8,439 payment above is principal-and-interest only. Total monthly housing payment (sometimes called PITI) usually adds:

  • Property tax — varies dramatically by state and locality. National median is roughly 1.1% of home value annually, paid monthly via escrow.
  • Homeowners insurance — typically $100–$200/month for a median-priced home, more in disaster-prone areas.
  • Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI) — required if your down payment is under 20%; typically 0.3%–1.5% of loan amount per year, dropping off once you reach 20% equity.
  • HOA dues — if applicable, often $200–$600+/month.

All-in, expect total monthly housing payment to be 20–30% higher than the P&I alone for typical scenarios. Read our pillar: 15-year vs 30-year mortgage for the full term-comparison framework.

Frequently asked questions

What is the monthly payment on a $1,000,000 mortgage at 6% for 15 years?

Short answer: $8,439 per month for principal and interest. Over the full 15-year loan, total interest is $518,942 and total repayment is $1,518,942 1.52× the original loan amount. Property tax, insurance, and PMI add 20–30% on top in typical scenarios.

How much equity will I have after 5 years?

Short answer: $239,909 in principal equity. Your remaining balance after 5 years is $760,091. During those 5 years you will have paid $266,405 in interest — substantially more than the principal reduction, because early mortgage payments are interest-heavy.

How much do I save with one extra $100 payment per month?

Short answer: Paying an extra $100/month shortens the loan to 14y 9m and saves $10,904 in total interest. The extra dollars go entirely to principal, bypassing the interest charge that they would have otherwise generated for the rest of the loan.

Should I refinance if rates drop?

Short answer: Run the break-even calculation. If new rates are 0.75 percentage points or more below your current rate, refinancing usually saves money — but only if you keep the home long enough to recoup closing costs (typically 2%–5% of loan amount). If rates drop only 0.25 points, the break-even period often exceeds how long most owners actually stay. Use our mortgage calculator with the new rate to compare.

Adjust the inputs
Try your specific loan amount and rate

Our mortgage calculator handles any loan amount, rate, term, and extra payment scenario with full amortization tables.

Open the mortgage calculator →
$1,000,000 at 6% — different terms
$1,000,000 for 15 years — different rates
Different loan amounts at 6% for 15 years

Educational content only. Not a loan offer or mortgage advice. Property tax, insurance, and PMI are excluded from the P&I calculation. Real-world rates depend on credit score, loan-to-value ratio, debt-to-income ratio, and lender fees. See our disclaimer, sources, and editorial standards.