If you're paying off a 30-year mortgage, interest can add up fast often costing more than the original loan amount over time. But what if you added just $5 a day ($150/month) to your payment?
That small extra amount goes directly toward the principal, helping you pay off your loan years earlier and potentially saving tens of thousands in interest. It’s a low-effort strategy with high-impact results especially if your mortgage rate is higher than typical investment returns.
If you take out a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage of $350,000 at a 6.00% interest rate, your monthly payment will be $2,098.43. Over the full term, you’ll pay a total of $755,433.66 with $405,433.66 going toward interest alone.
That’s $55,433.66 more than the original loan amount, just in interest highlighting how long-term mortgages can significantly increase your total cost of homeownership.
You don’t need to pay $5 daily just set aside $150 monthly, then apply it directly to your mortgage principal. With a standard $2,098.43 monthly payment on a $350,000 loan at 6.00%, this extra amount accelerates your payoff timeline.
Instead of 30 years, you’ll be mortgage-free in 25 years and 3 months saving $76,276.94 in interest, a 19% reduction. You’ll also pay less toward interest than principal, flipping the typical mortgage payment structure.
Whether you're considering the $5-a-day payoff trick, refinancing, or investing instead of prepaying, a mortgage calculator helps you visualize the impact. You can model different monthly contributions, interest rates, and loan terms to see how much interest you’ll save or how quickly you’ll pay off your loan.
At first glance, the $5-a-day trick looks like a no-brainer: for less than the cost of a daily latte, you could save $76,277 in mortgage interest. But what if you invested that money instead?
Historically, the S&P 500’s inflation-adjusted return averages around 6.68%. If you invested $150/month in an index fund for 30 years, you’d end up with $171,850 $54,000 in contributions and $117,850 in earnings.
That seems better than the mortgage savings until you realize you’re investing for 30 years, while the mortgage payoff strategy ends in 25 years and 3 months. If you then invest the full mortgage payment ($2,248.43/month) for the remaining 5 years, you’d build $160,000 $135,000 in contributions and $25,000 in earnings.
Both strategies yield similar results. The real decision is whether you prefer to be mortgage-free sooner or maximize long-term investment growth. Either way, the key is to consistently invest that $150/month whether into your mortgage or the market.
If you locked in a mortgage at 3% or less, your monthly payment on a $350,000 loan would be around $1,475.61. Over 30 years, you’d pay $531,221.08 total, with $181,221.08 in interest.
Now compare that to investing $150/month in an index fund with a 6.68% return you’d end up with $171,850 after 30 years. That’s nearly equal to the interest paid on your mortgage, meaning the two strategies effectively cancel each other out.
With a low mortgage rate, there’s less incentive to aggressively pay down your loan. You may build more wealth by investing that extra cash instead.
If your mortgage rate jumps to 9%, the financial picture shifts dramatically. A $350,000 loan at that rate means a monthly payment of $2,816.18, totaling $1,013,824.50 over 30 years with $663,824.50 in interest alone.
Using the $5-a-day trick (an extra $150/month toward principal), you could pay off your mortgage in 24 years and 2 months, saving over $150,000 in interest. That leaves nearly 6 years to invest the full mortgage payment.
Investing $2,816.18/month for 6 years at a 6.68% return could grow your account to over $260,000. In this scenario, early mortgage payoff wins especially when your loan rate far exceeds expected investment returns.
The $5-a-day trick can save you thousands in interest, but it’s not a one-size-fits-all solution.