Payoff Logic

Biweekly Mortgage Calculator

Half your payment every two weeks = 13 full payments a year instead of 12. See exactly how many years that removes from your mortgage and what it saves in interest — and when a paid biweekly "program" isn't worth it. Free, no signup.

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How it works: you pay half your monthly payment every two weeks. There are 26 two-week periods in a year, so you make the equivalent of 13 monthly payments instead of 12 — one full extra payment a year, every year, without feeling it.

Monthly plan

per month · paid off in

Total interest:

Biweekly plan

every 2 weeks · paid off in

Total interest:

Balance over time

Solid: biweekly · Dashed: monthly.

Model: interest accrues per two-week period at (annual rate ÷ 26); results match lender "accelerated biweekly" plans closely, though daily-accrual servicers differ slightly. Watch for third-party biweekly programs that charge setup fees — you can DIY the same result for free by adding 1/12 of your payment as a monthly extra.

The honest take on biweekly plans

Biweekly payments are a genuinely effective acceleration method — but they're not magic, and they're frequently oversold by services that charge for them. The mechanism is simply one extra payment per year, packaged to match how many people are paid (every two weeks). If your paycheck arrives biweekly, aligning your mortgage with it is painless budgeting psychology and the savings are real. If you'd rather not change your payment plumbing, adding 1/12 of your payment as a monthly extra achieves nearly the same curve — model it in the extra-payment calculator and compare.

Frequently asked questions

How do biweekly mortgage payments work?

You pay half of your monthly payment every two weeks. Because a year has 26 two-week periods, you make 26 half-payments — the equivalent of 13 full monthly payments instead of 12. That extra annual payment goes straight to principal, which is where the acceleration comes from.

How many years do biweekly payments take off a 30-year mortgage?

Typically 4 to 6 years, depending on the rate — higher rates save more. On a $300,000 loan at 6.5%, biweekly payments finish roughly 5½ years early and save six figures of interest over the life of the loan. Your exact numbers appear above.

Is biweekly different from paying twice a month?

Yes, and the difference is the whole trick. Twice a month (semi-monthly) = 24 half-payments = 12 full payments — no acceleration. Every two weeks (biweekly) = 26 half-payments = 13 full payments — one extra payment a year. Make sure any plan you join is truly biweekly.

Do biweekly payments save money because of payment frequency?

Mostly no. The overwhelming share of the savings comes from the 13th payment, not from paying two weeks sooner. That’s why the DIY equivalent — adding 1/12 of your payment to each monthly payment — produces almost identical results without changing your payment setup.

Should I pay for a biweekly payment program?

Usually not. Third-party biweekly services charge setup fees ($200–$400) and per-payment fees for something you can do free: many servicers accept biweekly schedules directly, and the 1/12-extra-per-month method needs no enrollment at all. Try both in our extra-payment calculator — the results are nearly identical.

Will my lender accept biweekly payments?

Some servicers credit half-payments as they arrive; others hold the first half until the second arrives (which still delivers the 13th-payment benefit over the year, with slightly less interest advantage). Ask how partial payments are applied before enrolling.

Does this calculator work for an existing mortgage?

Yes — enter your current balance and the years remaining instead of the original amount and term. The comparison then shows switching to biweekly from today.

Related calculators

  • Extra Payment Mortgage Calculator — What paying more each month (or one lump sum) does to your mortgage payoff date and interest.
  • Mortgage Payoff Calculator — Pay off your existing mortgage early: extra monthly payments, lump sums, and your new payoff date.
  • Mortgage Calculator — Estimate your full monthly payment — principal, interest, property taxes, insurance, PMI, and HOA — with a complete amortization schedule.
  • Loan Payoff Calculator — See how extra payments shorten your loan and how much interest you save.

Disclaimer: Educational purposes only — not financial advice. Servicer payment-application policies vary. See our Terms of Use.