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Study Guides > Finite Math

Putting It Together

You sit down to buy your first home. Your realtor is excited to sell you a home, the owner is thrilled to have their home sell, and the bank is eager to lend you the money to buy the house. You want to purchase the home for $250,000 and put 20% down. The bank will give you a loan for the remaining $200,000 at a rate of 4.5% APR. While you are ready to move and get settled, you wonder in the back of your mind, "How much is this home really going to cost me?” Neglecting insurance and taxes, how much will you pay for this $250,000 home after you make the last payment on a 30-year mortgage? By the end of this module, you should be able to put together an amortization schedule. After doing so, you should get a monthly payment of $1013.37. For 360 payments, this amounts to a grand total of $364,813.42, but you also put 20% down so you paid $414,813.42 for the house that you got for $250,000. While most of us cannot afford to pay cash for a new house, it should come as no surprise after seeing these calculations why banks are willing to lend us money to purchase homes.

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