50-year mortgage: How it stacks up against 15- and 30-year loans

What is the main trade-off when choosing a mortgage length?
It comes down to payment size, payoff time, and total cost. Shorter loans have higher monthly payments, but save thousands in interest. Longer loans reduce your monthly bill, but stretch out debt and increase the total interest paid.Why might a 50-year mortgage carry a higher interest rate?
Longer maturities mean more risk for lenders, and investors demand higher yields for longer-term loans—similar to how long-dated Treasury yields exceed shorter ones. So, a 50-year mortgage would almost certainly come with a rate premium.How does a fixed-rate mortgage payment work?
In a fixed-rate mortgage, the payment remains the same throughout the mortgage term. Early on, most of that payment goes toward interest; over time, more goes to principal as you pay down the balance—a process called amortization.Buying a house—it’s the classic American dream. You want the right home for your lifestyle, but you also need a payment plan that fits your budget. For most of us—particularly when buying that first house—that means taking out a mortgage. The classic debate has been between the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage and the shorter 15-year fixed-rate. A few buyers choose an adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM); each has a base of adherents who will tell you it’s the best way to go. And as if all that weren’t confusing enough, in 2025, there’s been talk of going even further—a 50-year mortgage aimed at making homeownership more affordable.
So which mortgage length makes the most sense? Most buyers pick the 30-year—about 90% of mortgage holders, according to the ConsumerAffairs Mortgage Statistics 2025 report—but like most money decisions, it’s not that cut-and-dried. The right choice depends on your goals and your resources. All else equal, a longer loan means smaller payments, but you’ll be making them for decades longer and building equity more slowly. And over time, you’ll pay far more in interest. Now, with talk of 50-year mortgages entering the mix, the trade-offs get even more complicated—especially since longer-dated mortgages typically come with higher rates, and lenders would have to figure out how to price or even fund a half-century loan.
Key Points
- Shorter loans mean higher monthly payments, but you’ll pay far less in interest over the life of the loan.
- Longer loans free up cash now, but cost you later—possibly worth it if you use the savings wisely.
- Longer maturities mean more risk for lenders, which is why a 50-year mortgage—if it ever exists—would likely carry a higher interest rate.
We can’t tell you which mortgage is best, but we can help you crunch the numbers. Use the Britannica Money mortgage calculator (see below) to find out how loan length and interest rates affect your monthly mortgage payment, the total interest you’ll pay over the life of the loan, and how quickly you’re able to build equity.
Principal, interest, and amortization
Before diving into mortgage lengths—or the new 50-year mortgage idea—it helps to know how a mortgage actually works. For a fixed-rate loan, the payment stays the same for the entire length of the mortgage. Each payment you make goes first toward interest on the outstanding principal balance, and the rest toward paying down that balance (what accountants call amortization).
Because your balance is highest in the early years, most of your first payments go toward interest. Over time, that balance shrinks, and a larger share of each payment chips away at the principal. The longer your loan term, the slower that payoff happens. A 15-year mortgage builds equity quickly, but comes with a higher monthly bill. A 30-year mortgage costs less each month, but it takes twice as long to own the home outright—and adds hundreds of thousands of dollars in total interest for the average loan.
That trade-off between payment size, payoff time, and total cost is the core of the mortgage-length debate.
Loan length, loan cost, and using a mortgage calculator
The numbers tell the story. Table 1 shows how a $400,000 home purchase (with a loan amount of $320,000 and assuming a down payment of 20%, or $80,000) looks when stretched across 15, 30, and 50 years. Each row shows the trade-off between payment size, total interest you’ll pay over the life of the loan, and how fast you build equity (i.e., how much you still owe toward the principal after 10 years of payments).
| 15-year loan at 6.4% | 30-year loan at 6.4% | 50-year loan at 6.4% | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Table 1: COMPARING COSTS. Comparison of 15-, 30-, and 50- year loans at 6.4% interest. | |||
| Monthly payment | $2,769.98 | $2,001.62 | $1,779.84 |
| Total interest paid | $178,596.78 | $400,582.81 | $747,901.75 |
| Principal balance remaining after 10 years | $141,937 | $270,600 | $307,804 |
Even without crunching every number, the pattern is clear: the longer the term, the smaller the payment—but the bigger the lifetime cost. And if your goal is owning your home free and clear (remember, until that mortgage balance is paid, the lender holds a lien on your property), the shorter your loan length, the sooner you’ll pay it off.
To illustrate, consider the bottom line of table 1. After a decade of payments, the 15-year borrower has already paid off more than half the loan, while the 50-year borrower has barely made a dent—still owing over 95% of the original balance. Of course, that accelerated pace of loan amortization comes at a cost—a significantly higher monthly payment.
Use the Britannica Money mortgage calculator to test it yourself. Adjust the rate, the loan amount, or the term, and watch how a few percentage points—or a few extra years—can reshape the total cost of homeownership.
The 50-year mortgage: Off the charts—and off the yield curve
Table 1 compared the monthly payments of different mortgage lengths at the same interest rate. That’s useful for an apples-to-apples look, but it’s not how it works in the real world. Shorter loans usually carry lower rates because lenders take on less risk. As of late 2025, the average 15-year fixed mortgage runs around 5.85%, while the 30-year sits near 6.4%. A 50-year mortgage, if it existed, would almost certainly come in higher.
The myth of the “tax-saving mortgage”?
Starting with the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017—and carried through under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025 (OBBBA)—the standard deduction rose high enough that most homeowners no longer itemize deductions.
Back when the standard deduction was lower, mortgage brokers loved to tout the “net effective mortgage rate,” showing how much you could save by deducting interest. But if you’re taking the standard deduction, those savings vanish—you can’t claim mortgage interest at all.
In other words, don’t assume your mortgage interest is a tax break. These days, for most homeowners, it isn’t.
That follows the same principle you see on the yield curve—the longer a lender’s money is tied up, the more return they demand. But projecting a rate for a 50-year mortgage is nearly impossible. There’s no 50-year Treasury benchmark to peg it to, and no deep market for lenders to hedge such a long-dated loan. Mortgage-backed securities (MBS) markets simply don’t extend that far.
Even if rates could be priced, another question looms: who would buy or guarantee these loans? Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac—the backbone of the U.S. mortgage market—currently cap conforming loans at 30 years. Without their backing, 50-year mortgages would have to live in the private market, where investors would demand even higher yields to take on that kind of duration and credit risk.
Table 2 compares the monthly payment, total interest, and amortization rate under a more realistic yield curve scenario. After 10 years, the 15-year borrower has paid off more than half the loan, while the 30-year borrower has barely chipped away at the balance—and the 50-year borrower has hardly begun. And when adjusted for a higher interest rate, the 50-year mortgage comes with a monthly payment that’s not dramatically lower than the 30-year—but the total interest bill is far higher and the equity build is painfully slow.
| 15-year loan at 5.85% | 30-year loan at 6.4% | 50-year loan at 7% | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Table 2: REALITY SETS IN. Comparison of 15-, 30-, and 50- year loans at realistic interest rates. | |||
| Monthly payment | $2,674.48 | $2,001.62 | $1,925.40 |
| Total interest paid | $161,406.06 | $400,582.81 | $835,241.83 |
| Principal balance remaining after 10 years | $138,839 | $270,600 | $309,834 |
Pros and cons of long-term mortgages
A longer mortgage term frees up cash in your monthly budget, and that money has present value. If you invest the difference wisely—say, in a retirement account, a 529 college savings plan if you have kids, or by paying down higher-interest debt—you could come out ahead. But if that “extra” money just disappears into daily spending, the benefit vanishes. The key is what you do with the savings. It’s what personal finance pros call good debt versus bad debt.
Still, not every decision is about yield. There’s a real price on your peace of mind. Some homeowners choose shorter mortgages, or pay them off early, simply because they like knowing their home is theirs. No market swings, no refinance risk, no payment hanging over them during a temporary cash crunch or a midlife career change.
If a 15-year feels too tight budget-wise and a 30-year feels too long, you could split the difference—20-year mortgages aren’t as popular, but they do exist. Alternatively, you could take a longer mortgage and make extra principal payments as your budget allows (e.g., if you receive a bonus or other windfall). Or you could do what many have done: buy a lower-priced home and trade up later as you progress in your career and/or as your family expands. The right mortgage isn’t just about the math. It’s about tailoring it to your needs, both today and tomorrow.
The bottom line
Mortgage length shapes more than your monthly payment—it determines how fast you build equity, how much interest you’ll pay over the life of the loan, and how long that debt will follow you. A 15-year loan builds equity faster and offers a quicker path out of debt and into peace of mind. A 30-year loan provides flexibility and breathing room as you progress through life stages.
A 50-year mortgage might make your monthly payments smaller, but it also keeps you in debt longer and magnifies the total interest you’ll pay. In the end, the right mortgage term isn’t about chasing the lowest payment or the fastest payoff—it’s about finding the balance that fits your life.
References
- Mortgage Statistics 2025 | consumeraffairs.com



