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Overview
Formula

01What this calculator tells you

A mortgage recast lowers your monthly payment by applying a lump-sum payment to your principal and then re-amortizing the remaining balance over the same term at the same interest rate. This calculator shows your new principal-and-interest payment, how much lower it is each month, your new balance, and the interest you would save over the life of the loan.

Enter your original loan amount, interest rate, term, and the month and year the loan started, then add the lump sum you plan to put down. The calculator estimates today’s balance for you and re-amortizes it — and unlike a refinance, a recast keeps your rate and payoff date exactly the same, so only the payment shrinks. You can compare more money tools any time in our full calculator library.

Estimates today’s balance from your loan’s start date — just enter the original amount, rate and term.
Shows monthly savings and lifetime interest saved, net of an optional recast fee.
Keeps the same rate and payoff date, the way a real lender recast works.

02Recast vs. refinance vs. extra payments

A recast is one of three common ways to use spare cash against a mortgage. Which one wins depends on your rate, your goal, and how much flexibility you want. All three rely on amortization — how each payment splits between interest and principal — covered in the mortgage guides from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).

Option
What changes
Best when
Recast
Lower payment; same rate and payoff date
You have a lump sum and a rate you want to keep
Refinance
New rate, new term and new payment
Market rates have dropped well below your rate
Extra principal
Shorter payoff; the payment stays the same
You want to be mortgage-free sooner
Rule of thumb: recast to improve monthly cash flow, refinance to capture a lower rate, and make extra payments to shorten the term.

03Which loans can be recast

Eligibility is set by your loan type and servicer, not by this calculator. Most conventional loans permit a recast, while government-backed loans usually do not — the CFPB breaks down the different kinds of home loans and how they work.

  • Usually eligible: conventional conforming loans owned by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.
  • Usually not eligible: FHA, VA and USDA loans, which are structured around their own amortization rules.
  • Sometimes eligible: jumbo and portfolio loans — ask your servicer, as terms vary by lender.
  • Requirements: current payments, a minimum lump sum (often $5,000-$10,000 or a set percentage), and a small fee.
Limitations and what the calculator can’t see +×

The math here is exact for a fixed-rate loan, but a real recast depends on your servicer’s rules. Treat the result as a close estimate, not a quote.

  • Principal and interest only. Your real bill also includes escrow for taxes and insurance, which a recast does not change. The IRS home mortgage interest rules (Publication 936) also mean lowering interest can slightly change what you deduct.
  • Minimums and timing. Servicers set a minimum lump sum and may only recast once the payment posts; the new payment usually starts the following cycle.
  • Opportunity cost. Cash used for the lump sum is no longer available to invest or keep as an emergency fund — compare the guaranteed payment reduction against other uses.
  • Adjustable-rate loans. If your rate can change, the estimate holds only until the next adjustment.
How to use it +×
  1. Enter the original loan amount, interest rate and loan term.
  2. Pick the month and year your loan started so the calculator can estimate today’s balance.
  3. Enter the lump-sum principal payment you plan to make, and your lender’s recast fee if you know it.
  4. Press Calculate to see today’s balance, the new payment, your monthly savings, and lifetime interest saved.

To weigh other savings decisions alongside your mortgage, try our early payoff calculator for a different big-ticket cash-flow comparison.

Frequently asked questions +×
Q Is it a good idea to recast your mortgage?
It is a good idea when you want a lower required payment, already have a rate worth keeping, and have a lump sum available. It mainly helps monthly cash flow; a refinance may save more if rates have dropped, and extra principal payments shorten the term faster.
Q Is it hard to get a mortgage recast?
Not usually. There is no new appraisal, credit check or income verification. You mainly need an eligible (typically conventional) loan, to be current on payments, and to meet the minimum lump sum and fee.
Q Does recasting change my interest rate or payoff date?
No. A recast keeps both the same — only the monthly principal-and-interest payment drops, because a smaller balance is spread over the same remaining term.
Q How much does it cost to recast a mortgage?
Most lenders charge a one-time fee of about $150-$500, with no appraisal or origination costs. Enter that fee in the optional field to see your savings net of the charge.
This calculator is for general education and is not financial advice or a lender quote. Recast eligibility, minimums and fees are set by your loan servicer. Confirm the details with your lender before making a lump-sum payment.

04Related calculators

Working through a related project? Try our Out-the-Door Price Calculator, Lead Time Calculator, and TV Wall Mount Height Calculator.

01The recast formula

A recast works in two stages: first reconstruct today’s balance from your original loan and start date, then re-amortize the new balance (today’s balance minus the lump sum) over the same remaining term at the same rate. Both stages use the standard amortized-payment formula.

Balance today (after p payments)
B_p = P(1 + i)^p – M0 x ((1 + i)^p – 1) / i
New monthly payment
M = B_new x i / (1 – (1 + i)^-n)

Where:

  • P= the original loan amount you borrowed.
  • i= the monthly interest rate = annual rate / 12 (e.g. 6.5% -> 0.0054167).
  • M0= the original monthly payment = P x i / (1 – (1 + i)^-N), where N = term x 12.
  • p= the number of payments made from the start date to today; B_new = B_p – lump sum, and n = N – p.

02Worked example

Take a $400,000 loan at 6.5% over 30 years, started about 5 years ago, with a $50,000 lump sum. Work it one line at a time:

Step 1 · Set up the numbers
i = 6.5% / 12 = 0.0054167, N = 30 x 12 = 360
Step 2 · Original payment
M0 = 400,000 x 0.0054167 / (1 – 1.0054167^-360) = $2,528
Step 3 · Balance today
B_p = $374,444 after p = 60 payments
Step 4 · Apply the lump sum
B_new = 374,444 – 50,000 = $324,444
Step 5 · Remaining term
n = 360 – 60 = 300 payments (25 years) left
Step 6 · New payment
M = 324,444 x 0.0054167 / (1 – 1.0054167^-300) = $2,191

That is about $338 per month lower — roughly $2,528 down to $2,191. Across the 300 remaining payments it is roughly $101,000 less paid over time — about $51,000 of it true interest savings once you subtract the $50,000 you contributed. You can double-check the compounding idea with the SEC’s compound interest calculator at Investor.gov, and review the borrower basics in the CFPB’s owning-a-home guide.

Mortgage Recast Calculator

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Enter your loan details and a lump-sum amount, then press Calculate.
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Elena Castillo ✓ Finance reviewed
Updated Jul 2026 · 6 min read · Reviewed by the InfoCalculator editorial team