Private mortgage insurance, commonly known as PMI, is one of the most misunderstood costs in homeownership. Many buyers discover it only when they see it on their first mortgage statement and wonder what exactly they are paying for. The short answer: PMI protects your lender, not you, if you default on the loan. The longer answer involves understanding when you need it, how much it costs, and the strategies you can use to avoid paying it at all.
What Is Private Mortgage Insurance?
PMI is a type of insurance that lenders require on conventional mortgage loans when the borrower puts down less than 20% of the purchase price. From the lender’s perspective, borrowers with less equity in the home present higher risk. PMI transfers some of that risk to an insurance company. If you stop making payments and the lender has to foreclose, the PMI policy covers a portion of the lender’s losses.
PMI is required on conventional loans only. Government-backed loans (FHA, USDA, VA) have their own forms of mortgage insurance or none at all.
How Much Does PMI Cost?
PMI costs vary based on your loan size, down payment amount, credit score, and the specific insurer your lender uses. Typically, PMI runs between 0.5% and 1.5% of the original loan amount per year. On a $400,000 loan, that works out to $2,000 to $6,000 per year, or roughly $167 to $500 per month added to your mortgage payment.
Borrowers with lower credit scores or smaller down payments pay higher PMI rates. Borrowers with excellent credit and down payments of 15% to 19% pay rates at the lower end of the range.
How Is PMI Paid?
There are several ways PMI can be structured:
- Monthly PMI: The most common structure. An amount is added to your monthly mortgage payment and collected along with principal and interest.
- Single-premium PMI: You pay the entire PMI cost upfront at closing in a lump sum. This eliminates the monthly charge but requires more cash at closing.
- Split-premium PMI: A combination of upfront and monthly payments.
- Lender-paid PMI: The lender pays the PMI cost but charges you a higher interest rate in exchange. This can make sense in some situations, though the higher rate lasts the life of the loan.
When Does PMI Go Away?
Under the Homeowners Protection Act of 1998, you have specific rights regarding PMI cancellation on conventional loans:
- You can request cancellation when your loan balance reaches 80% of the original purchase price and you have a good payment history.
- PMI must be automatically cancelled when your loan balance reaches 78% of the original purchase price based on the original amortization schedule.
- PMI must be cancelled at the midpoint of your loan term (15 years on a 30-year mortgage) regardless of loan balance, as long as you are current on payments.
If your home has appreciated significantly, you may be able to request cancellation sooner by getting a new appraisal that demonstrates your loan-to-value ratio is below 80% based on the current value.
How to Calculate When You Will Reach 20% Equity
Use our mortgage calculator to model your loan balance over time and estimate when you will reach the 80% loan-to-value threshold that lets you request PMI cancellation.
Strategies to Avoid PMI
Put Down 20%
The most straightforward way to avoid PMI is to make a 20% down payment. On a $400,000 home, that is $80,000 down. This is a high bar for many buyers, particularly in expensive markets, but it eliminates PMI entirely and also typically secures a better interest rate.
Piggyback Loan (80/10/10)
A piggyback loan is a second mortgage taken out simultaneously with the first to reduce the first mortgage below 80% loan-to-value. The most common structure is 80/10/10: an 80% first mortgage, a 10% second mortgage (usually a home equity loan or HELOC), and a 10% down payment. This eliminates PMI because the first mortgage is at 80% LTV.
The tradeoff is that the second mortgage typically carries a higher interest rate than the first. Whether this makes financial sense depends on current rates and your specific numbers.
Lender-Paid PMI
Some lenders offer to pay the PMI cost in exchange for a slightly higher interest rate on your loan. This can make sense if you plan to sell or refinance within a few years, because you avoid the PMI while the lender-paid premium is covered by the rate increase. Over a longer term, you usually pay more through the higher rate than you would have paid in monthly PMI.
VA Loans (No PMI)
If you are eligible for a VA loan as a veteran, active-duty service member, or surviving spouse, VA loans require no down payment and no PMI. There is a VA funding fee (a one-time upfront charge), but no ongoing monthly mortgage insurance. VA loans are one of the most underutilized benefits available to eligible service members.
USDA Loans
USDA loans for eligible rural and suburban properties have no PMI, though they do have an annual guarantee fee (similar in concept to PMI but often lower). The upfront fee and annual fee are generally lower than FHA mortgage insurance, making USDA a good option for eligible buyers.
FHA Loan Considerations
FHA loans require mortgage insurance premiums (MIP), which is similar to PMI but operates differently. FHA MIP includes an upfront premium (1.75% of the loan amount) plus an annual premium. If you put down at least 10% on an FHA loan, the annual premium falls off after 11 years. If you put down less than 10%, the premium stays for the life of the loan. This makes FHA less favorable for long-term owners than conventional loans with PMI, which eventually cancels.
Is PMI Always Bad?
Not necessarily. PMI gets a bad reputation, but it serves a legitimate purpose: it enables buyers to purchase homes sooner than they otherwise could. Consider this scenario: a buyer could wait three more years to save a 20% down payment, or buy now with 10% down and pay PMI for several years. In a market where home prices appreciate, buying now with PMI may result in more wealth accumulation than waiting to eliminate PMI by saving longer.
The calculus depends on your local market, current rent vs. buy costs, and how quickly home values are appreciating. PMI is a cost, but not always an irrational one.
How to Request PMI Cancellation
If you believe your loan balance has reached 80% of the original purchase price or the current value based on appreciation, here is how to request cancellation:
- Contact your loan servicer in writing and request PMI cancellation.
- Confirm you have a good payment history (no 30-day late payments in the past 12 months).
- If requesting based on appreciation (not just your original amortization schedule), you may need to pay for a new appraisal at your expense.
- Confirm the property has no subordinate liens (additional mortgages or HELOCs) that could affect the servicer’s decision.
Final Thoughts
PMI is not forever. In 2026, buyers who put down less than 20% are not locked into paying mortgage insurance indefinitely. Understanding your cancellation rights, tracking your loan balance, and taking proactive steps to reach 80% equity as quickly as possible are all within your control. Whether you avoid PMI entirely by choosing a VA loan, a piggyback structure, or a 20% down payment, or you pay it knowing it will eventually end, make the decision with full information rather than letting it catch you off guard.