PITI Payment Calculator

Calculate your full PITI mortgage payment — principal, interest, property taxes, and insurance — plus PMI if applicable. See the total monthly housing cost.

About the PITI Payment Calculator

When lenders quote a mortgage payment they usually mean principal and interest only, but your actual monthly obligation is much larger. PITI — principal, interest, taxes, and insurance — captures the full picture. Add PMI when your down payment is below 20 %, and the number can be hundreds of dollars higher than the base P&I figure.

Understanding your complete PITI payment is essential for budgeting. Mortgage qualification guidelines like the 28 % front-end DTI rule use the full PITI number, not just principal and interest. If you underestimate housing costs, you risk stretching your budget too thin.

This PITI Payment Calculator breaks every component down so you can see exactly where your money goes each month. Adjust inputs to explore how property taxes, insurance rates, and PMI influence the total. In many markets, taxes and insurance alone add $400 to $800 per month beyond the base mortgage amount, making a complete PITI estimate indispensable before you sign a purchase agreement or lock in a price.

Why Use This PITI Payment Calculator?

Knowing only your principal and interest payment can be dangerously misleading. A $2,000 P&I payment may actually cost $2,800 a month once you add taxes, insurance, and PMI. Use this calculator to see the real number before you commit to a purchase, and to verify whether your housing costs stay within the recommended 28 % of gross income.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the home price and your planned down payment amount.
  2. Set the mortgage interest rate and loan term (15 or 30 years).
  3. Enter the annual property tax rate for your county or municipality.
  4. Enter your expected annual homeowners insurance premium.
  5. Review the full PITI breakdown showing each component.
  6. If LTV exceeds 80 %, the calculator automatically adds an estimated PMI cost.
  7. Compare the total payment to 28 % of your gross monthly income.

Formula

PITI = M + (Annual Property Tax ÷ 12) + (Annual Insurance ÷ 12) + PMI, where M = P × [r(1+r)^n] / [(1+r)^n − 1], r = annual rate / 12, n = total months, PMI ≈ 0.5 % of loan / 12 when LTV > 80 %.

Example Calculation

Result: $2,706/mo total PITI

On a $350,000 home with 10 % down ($35,000), the $315,000 loan at 6.75 % for 30 years produces a $2,043 P&I payment. Property tax at 1.25 % adds $365/mo, insurance adds $133/mo, and PMI at 0.5 % adds $131/mo, resulting in a total $2,706 monthly housing cost. This equals 100 % visibility into the true payment.

Tips & Best Practices

Why PITI Matters More Than P&I

When you see a mortgage payment advertised, it almost always shows only the principal and interest portion. But your actual monthly obligation includes property taxes and homeowners insurance, both of which are collected through your escrow account. Adding these components can increase the payment by 30–50 %, so understanding PITI is crucial for realistic budgeting.

How Lenders Use PITI

The front-end debt-to-income ratio divides your total PITI by your gross monthly income. Conventional guidelines set the maximum at 28 %, while FHA loans allow up to 31 %. Veterans Affairs loans do not impose a strict front-end limit but do evaluate residual income. Regardless of the program, a lower PITI-to-income ratio strengthens your application and may unlock better interest rates.

Managing Each Component

Property taxes are set by local government and can sometimes be reduced through exemptions (homestead, senior, veteran) or formal appeals. Insurance premiums depend on your home's location, construction, and your deductible — bundling policies or raising your deductible can save hundreds per year. PMI is temporary; once you reach 80 % LTV through payments or appreciation, you can request removal and recapture that monthly savings.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does PITI stand for?

PITI stands for Principal, Interest, Taxes, and Insurance — the four components of a complete monthly mortgage payment. Lenders use PITI to determine whether you can afford the loan based on your income.

Does PITI include PMI?

Technically PITI refers to the four core components, but lenders routinely add PMI to the qualifying payment when the down payment is below 20 %. Our calculator includes PMI automatically when applicable so you see the true cost.

What is a good PITI-to-income ratio?

Most lenders prefer your PITI to be no more than 28 % of your gross monthly income. FHA guidelines allow up to 31 %, and some lenders stretch to 33 % for strong borrowers. Staying below 28 % provides a comfortable buffer for other expenses.

Are HOA dues included in PITI?

No, HOA dues are separate from PITI. However, some lenders add HOA dues to PITI when calculating your debt-to-income ratio. Always budget for HOA fees on top of your PITI payment.

How do I find my property tax rate?

Check your county or city assessor's website. You can also look at recent tax bills for comparable properties in the same neighborhood. Rates typically range from 0.5 % to 2.5 % of assessed value depending on the state.

Can I lower my PITI payment?

You can reduce PITI by making a larger down payment (eliminates PMI), choosing a longer loan term, shopping for better insurance rates, or appealing your property tax assessment. Buying in a lower-tax jurisdiction also helps.

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