Second Mortgage Calculator

Calculate your second mortgage payment and combined loan-to-value ratio. See total monthly payments across both loans and combined interest costs.

About the Second Mortgage Calculator

A second mortgage is an additional loan secured by your home, taken on top of your primary (first) mortgage. Common uses include avoiding PMI with an 80/10/10 structure, tapping equity for renovations, or consolidating high-interest debt. Because the second lien is subordinate to the first, it carries a higher interest rate.

Understanding how a second mortgage affects your total monthly obligation, your combined loan-to-value ratio (CLTV), and your overall interest cost is essential before taking one on. If your CLTV exceeds lender limits, you may not qualify — or you'll pay a significantly higher rate.

This Second Mortgage Calculator shows both loans side by side, calculates the combined monthly payment, CLTV, and total interest cost over the life of each loan. Seeing the combined numbers in one view is critical because many borrowers underestimate how a second lien at a higher rate affects the overall cost of homeownership, even when the second mortgage balance appears modest.

Why Use This Second Mortgage Calculator?

Taking a second mortgage adds complexity to your finances. You now have two payments, two interest rates, and a higher CLTV. This calculator helps you see the full picture: total monthly payment, how much more you're paying in combined interest, and whether an alternative (cash-out refinance, HELOC) might be cheaper overall. Running the numbers before you apply prevents unexpected budget strain and helps you negotiate better terms with confidence.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your home's current estimated value.
  2. Enter the first mortgage details: balance, rate, and remaining term.
  3. Enter the second mortgage details: loan amount, rate, and term.
  4. Review the combined monthly payment and CLTV ratio.
  5. Check total interest paid across both loans.
  6. Compare to alternatives like a cash-out refinance.

Formula

Payment₁ = standard amortization on first mortgage. Payment₂ = standard amortization on second mortgage. Total Monthly = Payment₁ + Payment₂. CLTV = (Balance₁ + Balance₂) ÷ Home Value × 100.

Example Calculation

Result: Combined payment: $2,622/mo — CLTV: 82.2%

The first mortgage ($320,000 at 6.5 % over 27 years) costs $2,130/month. The second mortgage ($50,000 at 8.5 % over 15 years) costs $492/month. The combined payment is $2,622. CLTV is ($320,000 + $50,000) / $450,000 = 82.2 %. Total interest across both loans over their respective terms is $381,680.

Tips & Best Practices

When a Second Mortgage Makes Sense

Second mortgages are useful when you need a specific lump sum and want fixed payments, when you're buying a home with less than 20 % down and want to avoid PMI via an 80/10/10 structure, or when you want to tap equity without disturbing a low first mortgage rate.

Second Mortgage vs Cash-Out Refinance

If your first mortgage rate is already high, a cash-out refinance may be cheaper by consolidating into one lower-rate loan. If your first mortgage rate is low (e.g., 3–4 %), a second mortgage preserves that favorable rate while adding new financing at a higher but separate rate. Compare the total monthly payments of both approaches.

Understanding Subordination Risk

Second mortgage lenders accept higher risk because they're paid after the first lien in foreclosure. This risk premium results in higher rates and stricter CLTV requirements. If home values decline, the second mortgage lender may be completely wiped out, which is why underwriting standards are tighter for second liens.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is CLTV?

Combined Loan-to-Value (CLTV) is the total of all mortgage balances divided by the home's value. If your home is worth $400,000 and you owe $280,000 on the first mortgage plus $40,000 on a second, your CLTV is 80 %. Most lenders cap CLTV at 80–90 % for second mortgages.

What is an 80/10/10 piggyback loan?

An 80/10/10 structure uses a first mortgage for 80 % of the home price, a second mortgage for 10 %, and a 10 % down payment. The 80 % first mortgage avoids PMI while the smaller second mortgage covers part of the remaining balance. This can be cheaper than paying PMI on a single loan with less than 20 % down.

Can I deduct interest on a second mortgage?

Second mortgage interest may be deductible if the combined mortgage debt is under the limit ($750,000 for loans after 2017) and the second mortgage was used to buy, build, or substantially improve the home. Interest on second mortgages used for other purposes (debt consolidation) is generally not deductible.

Is a second mortgage or HELOC better?

A second mortgage (home equity loan) offers a fixed rate and fixed payments — ideal for a one-time need. A HELOC offers a variable rate and flexible borrowing — better for ongoing needs like renovation. Compare rates, fees, and your specific use case.

What happens to a second mortgage in foreclosure?

In foreclosure, the first mortgage is paid first from sale proceeds. The second mortgage lien holder receives whatever is left, which may be nothing if the home sells for less than the first mortgage balance. This subordinate position is why second mortgages carry higher rates.

Can I refinance a second mortgage?

Yes, you can refinance a second mortgage independently, or consolidate both loans into a single new first mortgage (cash-out refinance). When refinancing only the second, the first mortgage lender must agree to remain in first lien position through a subordination agreement.

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