NewRez Home Equity Loan Calculator
Estimate monthly payments, amortization schedule, and view interest vs principal using an interactive chart.
Amortization Schedule
| Date | Payment | Principal | Interest | Extra | Balance |
|---|
Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Actual loan terms and payments will vary. Contact NewRez or a licensed lender for exact figures.
New Rez Home Equity Loan Calculator
A NewRez Home Equity Loan Calculator is an interactive web tool that estimates monthly payments, total interest, amortization schedules, and payoff timelines for a fixed-rate home equity loan, letting homeowners quickly compare scenarios and make informed borrowing decisions.
How to Use the NewRez Home Equity Loan Calculator
What this calculator does
This NewRez home equity loan calculator estimates your monthly payment and total cost for a home equity loan based on the loan amount, annual percentage rate (APR), repayment term, and optional extra monthly payments. It produces an amortization schedule and an interactive Plotly chart that visualizes the remaining balance and cumulative interest over time. The tool is optimized to fit into a standard WordPress content column between two sidebars and uses a white background for clean integration with your site’s design.
Inputs you need
- Loan Amount ($) — the total principal you plan to borrow (e.g., $50,000).
- Interest Rate (APR %) — annual rate the lender charges (enter the APR as a percentage, e.g., 6.25).
- Term (Years) — the length of the loan in years (commonly 5, 10, 15, or 20 years for home equity loans).
- Start Date — optional date to label your amortization schedule (defaults to today).
- Extra Monthly Payment ($) — any additional principal you’ll add monthly to accelerate payoff and reduce interest.
Step-by-step: Running a basic calculation
- Open the calculator embedded in the page (it is sized to fit typical WordPress columns and will remain responsive on mobile).
- Enter the Loan Amount, for example
50,000. - Enter the Interest Rate (APR) such as
6.25. - Choose the Term in years, for example
10. - Optionally enter an Extra Monthly Payment — a small extra amount each month reduces interest and shortens the term.
- Click Calculate. The calculator will display:
- Monthly Payment (standard amortizing payment excluding extras),
- Total Interest Paid, and
- Total Paid (principal + interest).
It will also render an interactive Plotly chart showing remaining balance and cumulative interest, and it will populate a detailed amortization table below.
How to interpret the results
- Monthly Payment: This is the standard payment required for the amortization schedule at the entered APR and term (extra payments aren’t included in the “monthly payment” number but are shown in the schedule and factored into payoff calculations).
- Total Interest Paid: The cumulative interest you’ll pay if you follow the schedule (extra payments reduce this number).
- Chart: The line for “Remaining Balance” demonstrates how principal falls over time; the “Cumulative Interest” line (plotted on a second y-axis) shows how interest accumulates. Hover over data points to see exact numbers.
- Amortization Table: Each row shows the payment date, payment amount, principal portion, interest portion, extra applied that month, and remaining balance. Use the “Download CSV” button for offline review or to import into spreadsheets.
Practical examples
- Compare terms: Try the same loan amount at 5-year vs 10-year terms to see how monthly payments increase and total interest decreases with shorter terms.
- Test interest-rate sensitivity: Increase and decrease APR by 0.5% to visualize how much interest changes across the life of the loan.
- See the impact of extra payments: Add $100 extra per month and re-run the calculation; you’ll notice the payoff shrinks and total interest paid drops — the amortization table will show earlier payoff.
Tips for accuracy and real-world use
- Use the APR your lender quotes (not just the nominal rate) to better approximate true cost.
- Include realistic extra payments; intermittent large prepayments are more effective than small, irregular extras.
- Remember fees: the calculator does NOT automatically include closing costs, origination fees, or third-party charges. If you have an upfront fee, add it to the loan principal to see the all-in cost (or adjust manually in your planning).
- Always verify results with your lender. This is an estimate.
Why use Plotly.js here?
Plotly provides interactive, touch-friendly charts: visitors can hover to inspect values, zoom into time ranges, and view dual y-axes (balance vs cumulative interest). This improves engagement and helps users stay on the page to better understand trade-offs in loan decisions.
Accessibility and UX considerations
- Inputs have clear labels and default values to reduce friction.
- The table is keyboard-scrollable and CSV export enables alternate access.
- For best accessibility, ensure the surrounding theme has adequate contrast for small UI text and that screen readers can access the custom HTML block’s content.
Disclaimer
This calculator provides estimates only and is not a loan approval, a quote, or legal/financial advice. For exact loan terms, pricing, and eligibility, contact NewRez or a licensed lender. Actual payments and costs can vary by lender, credit score, taxes, and fees.
FAQ
Q1: Is the calculator accurate for fees and closing costs?
A1: No — it calculates principal and interest only. Add fees to the loan amount to approximate all-in cost, but confirm fees with your lender.
Q2: Does the calculator support adjustable rates or HELOCs?
A2: This version models fixed-rate home equity loans. HELOCs (variable-rate) behave differently and require a different calculator.
Q3: Can I export the amortization schedule?
A3: Yes — click Download CSV to save the full amortization table and open it in Excel or Google Sheets.
Q4: How do extra payments affect my loan?
A4: Extra monthly payments reduce principal faster, lower total interest paid, and shorten loan term. Test different extra amounts to see the effect.
Q5: Can I embed this into my WordPress widget area?
A5: Yes — paste the single-file HTML into a Custom HTML block or a widget that accepts raw HTML/JS. The calculator’s CSS is scoped and sized to fit most theme content widths.