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Estimate PMI cost by score and LTV instead of guessing from a lender quote.
If you are trying to understand monthly mortgage insurance before you apply, a PMI calculation table is one of the fastest ways to compare scenarios. It helps you see how credit score, loan-to-value ratio, and down payment work together. Many borrowers search for a PMI calculation table because the cost can vary a lot between lenders and score tiers. This page gives you a simple way to compare those ranges and identify the cheapest path before you lock a rate.
The PMI calculation table below gives a planning estimate only. Actual PMI depends on loan program, property type, lender, and the final quote you receive at underwriting. Still, a table is useful because it shows the pattern: lower credit scores and higher loan-to-value ratios usually mean higher PMI.
| Credit score | 5% down (95% LTV) | 10% down (90% LTV) | 15% down (85% LTV) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 760+ | 0.20%–0.35% | 0.14%–0.25% | 0.10%–0.18% |
| 740–759 | 0.25%–0.40% | 0.16%–0.28% | 0.11%–0.20% |
| 720–739 | 0.30%–0.45% | 0.18%–0.30% | 0.12%–0.22% |
| 700–719 | 0.40%–0.60% | 0.22%–0.36% | 0.15%–0.25% |
| 680–699 | 0.50%–0.75% | 0.28%–0.45% | 0.18%–0.30% |
| 660–679 | 0.60%–0.90% | 0.35%–0.55% | 0.22%–0.35% |
The PMI calculation table above shows annual rates (as a percentage of loan amount) by credit score and LTV. To estimate monthly PMI, multiply your loan amount by the rate and divide by 12. For example, a $300,000 loan at 0.50% annual rate = $1,250/year or ~$104/month. Get your exact estimate with our PMI calculator.
Credit score has a major impact on PMI. Borrowers with 760+ credit pay 25–40% less PMI than those with 680–699 scores. See detailed PMI ranges by credit score and understand how even small score improvements save money.
PMI removal depends on your LTV and down payment. Most borrowers can request removal at 80% LTV (20% equity); automatic removal happens at 78% LTV. Learn typical removal timelines and state-specific requirements.
Use the PMI calculation table as a comparison tool, not a final quote. For example, a borrower with a 760+ score and 10% down usually pays less PMI than a borrower with a 680 score and 5% down. The table also explains why small changes in down payment can make a big difference. Moving from 5% down to 10% down often lowers the monthly PMI cost and can make it easier to remove PMI later.
Suppose you are buying a $350,000 home. With 5% down, your loan amount is $332,500. If your PMI rate is 0.45%, your approximate annual PMI is $1,496. About $125 per month. If the rate drops to 0.22% with a stronger credit profile or higher down payment, the monthly cost falls significantly. That is why a PMI calculation table is useful early in the process: it helps you compare whether a bigger down payment is worth it.
Your lender's quote may differ from a public PMI calculation table because each insurer uses its own risk tiers. Some lenders also adjust pricing based on occupancy, property type, and whether the loan is fixed or adjustable. The table is still valuable because it shows the direction of change. If your quote is far above the table range, it may be worth comparing lenders or increasing the down payment.
Borrowers often ask whether the PMI calculation table matters after closing. It still does. If you know your cost today, you can make a better plan for the future. Combining the table with an equity timeline tells you both what you pay now and when you can stop paying it. That makes the table a practical planning tool, not just a research page.
The PMI calculation table is especially useful before you make an offer, while you are comparing lenders, or when you are deciding whether to wait and save for a larger down payment. It is also helpful if you are trying to answer a very specific question: should I accept a slightly higher payment today in exchange for a smaller PMI cost later? For many borrowers, the answer is clearer once they see the numbers side by side.
Imagine two borrowers buying the same home. Borrower A has a 760 score and 10% down. Borrower B has a 690 score and 5% down. The PMI calculation table shows that Borrower A likely pays a lower monthly amount and reaches the removal threshold sooner. That means the table is not just about cost today — it can also point to a faster exit from PMI over time.
If you want the simplest workflow, start with the PMI calculation table, then move to the calculator, then compare removal timing. That sequence gives you both the cost and the exit plan. A lot of borrowers jump straight to the monthly number, but the table helps you understand how close you are to a better bracket. That is the real value of a table-based approach.
It is used to estimate monthly PMI costs by credit score and LTV so borrowers can compare scenarios before they apply.
No. It gives a planning estimate, while the final lender quote depends on insurer rules, loan details, and underwriting.
Yes. Once you know the current cost, you can combine it with your equity timeline to estimate when PMI removal may happen.