Interest Only Payment Calculation
((Loan Amount)*(Interest Rate)) / 12 =payment
Get you calculator
Loan Amount $100,000
Interest Rate 6.5% (expressed as a decimal .065)
Input Loan Amount $100,000
Multiply by Rate .065
Divide by 12
Payment = $541.67
~Danke Schoen
Feel free to contact me with any other questions
MrDankeSchoen@Yahoo.com
2006-08-26 08:21:18
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answer #1
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answered by mrdankeschoen 2
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there are many different ways to calculate the payment, but if you have a financial calculator you would enter the interest rate per payment period, enter your mortgage balance both in the present value of the mortgage and the future value of the mortgage, and then enter the number of payments the mortgage is being calculated over (number of years x number of payments per year) after this is all done you would compute the for the payment and it would give you the interest only payment, as you told the calculator that you did not reduce the value of the mortgage principal.
There are a great number of interest compounding methods that will make a difference in the actual payment.
You can also seek out mortgage calculators on line at most of the financial institutions, and plug in your own numbers and find out the payments.
Good Luck
2006-08-26 11:37:09
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answer #2
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answered by peterpfann 3
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An interest only payment is quite simple. Divide the APR by 12 to get the periodic monthly rate. Multiply the periodic monthly rate by the principal to get the interest only payment.
Example: A $100,000.00 mortgage at 6% APR. 6% / 12 = .5% periodic monthly rate. Express the periodic monthly rate as a decimal (.005) and multiply: $100,000 x .005 = $500.00. Your monthly payment is $500.00.
FYI, the payment on a regular 30 year mortgage loan would be $599.55
2006-08-26 12:24:59
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answer #3
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answered by Bostonian In MO 7
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Check out this website, that's the one I'm using.
You can compare, and there is also a Calculator section.
http://www.bankrate.com/brm/default.asp
Calculators page:
http://www.bankrate.com/brm/rate/calc_home.asp
2006-08-26 11:39:47
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answer #4
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answered by ilyaniv 1
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Best way is to ask the institution you are dealing with how they calculate. it then you will have a more accurate answer....
2006-08-26 11:44:39
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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2nd worse type of loan, do more research on it.
Read this article
http://www.voiceofsandiego.org/articles/2006/08/28/news/01exotic.txt
2006-08-30 03:04:17
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answer #6
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answered by BrokenRomeo 5
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there are some website that you can just plug in the #'s and it will figure it for you, search mortage calculator
2006-08-26 11:35:30
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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hello, here's an easy
link with info and offers on mortgages:
http://finance.ebookorama.com/
also perhaps here:
http://credit.ebookorama.com
http://credit-repair.ebookorama.com
http://credit-cards.ebookorama.com
if you get any luck please don't forget about me lol, hope it helped you, thanks!
2006-08-29 20:28:27
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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