How Long Do You Have to Pay PMI?

Quick answer

PMI usually ends automatically at 78% loan‑to‑value (LTV); you can request removal at about 80% LTV.

Get it sooner

Borrower-request cancellation, appraisals, or refinancing can end PMI early.

Use our tool

Estimate your LTV and PMI removal date with the PMI calculator.

This guide explains how long you typically pay private mortgage insurance (PMI) on conventional loans, the difference between automatic termination and borrower-request cancellation, and concrete steps to stop paying PMI sooner.

Quick answer

Most conventional loans stop PMI automatically when the principal balance reaches 78% of the original value (original property value at loan origination). Borrowers can request cancellation once they believe they have 80% LTV based on the current balance and home value.

Key rules that affect how long you pay PMI

  • Automatic termination: The Homeowners Protection Act requires servicers to cancel PMI automatically at 78% original LTV if payments are current. Learn the automatic removal rules.
  • Borrower-request cancellation: You may request cancellation at 80% original LTV; servicers usually require a written request and evidence of value or an appraisal. See our step-by-step request process.
  • Loan age protections: If you have an early payment schedule, the timing to reach 78–80% depends on your start balance, interest rate, and amortization. Requirements vary by state; check state-specific rules.

Typical timelines — examples

Below are simplified examples showing roughly when PMI could end depending on the original down payment and a fixed rate amortization. Use our PMI calculator for precise dates on your loan.

Original down paymentApprox. time to 80% LTVApprox. time to 78% (auto cancel)
5% down10–14 years12–16 years
10% down8–11 years9–12 years
15% down6–9 years7–10 years

Why timelines vary

Two loans with the same down payment can reach 80% at different times because of:

  • Interest rate (higher rates slow principal paydown)
  • Loan term (15‑year loans reach thresholds much faster than 30‑year loans)
  • Extra payments or principal prepayments (these speed up PMI removal)
  • Home value changes (appreciation reduces LTV, possibly enabling earlier removal)

How to stop paying PMI sooner

  1. Track your balance and LTV: Use statements and our PMI calculator to estimate current LTV.
  2. Request cancellation at ~80% LTV: Learn the formal request process and what documents your servicer requires.
  3. Get an appraisal if needed: If your home has appreciated, a lender‑approved appraisal can show your LTV is below 80% and speed removal. Understand how appraisals work in our state-specific guide.
  4. Make extra payments: Even modest extra payments toward principal can shorten the PMI timeline significantly. Use our extra payment calculator to model savings.
  5. Refinance: If rates are favorable or you have substantial equity, refinancing into a new mortgage without PMI may be the fastest option. Compare costs with PMI vs other insurance options.

Sample borrower scenario

Borrower A bought a $300,000 home with 5% down ($15,000). On a 30‑year loan at current market rates, they may reach 80% LTV in roughly 10–13 years. If the area appreciates 5–10% during that time, an appraisal could reduce the time to request cancellation by a year or more.

How to calculate your LTV and estimate when PMI stops

To estimate how long you will pay PMI, calculate your current loan‑to‑value (LTV): divide your current principal balance by the original purchase price (or current appraised value if you have an appraisal). Plug those numbers into the PMI Calculator to see an estimated date when you cross 80% and 78% thresholds. Asking "how long do you have to pay PMI" is usually answered in years, not months, because amortization schedules move slowly unless you make extra payments or the home appreciates significantly.

Lender-specific exceptions and special cases

Some servicers have additional rules — for example, they may require you to be current on payments for a certain period or to provide a lender‑approved appraisal before cancelling PMI. Other servicers automatically terminate PMI earlier if the loan was originated with certain mortgage insurance arrangements. If you're wondering exactly "how long do you have to pay PMI" for your loan, check your loan documents and contact your servicer for the exact policy — policies can differ slightly between servicers and loan programs.

Checklist: What to send when you request PMI removal

  1. Current mortgage statement showing principal balance.
  2. Written request referencing your loan number and the phrase "request for PMI cancellation".
  3. Proof of on‑time payments if the servicer requests payment history.
  4. Appraisal or broker price opinion if the servicer requires a valuation.
  5. Contact information and preferred delivery method for the servicer's written response.

Optimizing your PMI removal request

If you want to shorten how long you have to pay PMI, prepare strong documentation before you ask. An appraisal showing appreciation, evidence of consistent on‑time payments, and a concise written request with the items above will make it easier for the servicer to approve removal. When preparing a request, reference applicable laws such as the Homeowners Protection Act to remind servicers of automatic and borrower‑request rules.

When refinancing is the faster option

In some markets, refinancing into a new mortgage without PMI is faster than waiting for automatic termination — especially when home values have risen or mortgage rates are favorable. Compare closing costs and the break‑even period before choosing refinance as a strategy to stop paying PMI.

Sample timeline summary

Summary: most borrowers asking "how long do you have to pay PMI" will find the answer falls between 6 and 15 years depending on down payment, loan term, interest rate, extra payments, and home value growth. Use the PMI Calculator and the checklist above to plan your next steps and shorten that timeline where possible.

Documentation your servicer commonly requests

  • Written borrower-request letter (use our PMI cancellation letter template)
  • Recent mortgage statement showing balance
  • Proof of payments (if servicer needs on-time history)
  • Appraisal or lender-approved valuation if the servicer requires it

Related tools and guides

FAQ

When does PMI automatically stop?

Servicers must automatically terminate PMI when the loan balance reaches 78% of the original value, assuming you are current on payments.

Can appreciation end PMI faster?

Yes. An appraisal showing increased home value can lower your LTV and allow you to request PMI cancellation earlier.

Do FHA loans have PMI rules?

No—FHA loans use MIP (Mortgage Insurance Premium) and have different removal rules. See our FHA-specific guide for details.