Skip to main content

Massachusetts Mortgage Calculator (2026)

Calculate your monthly mortgage payment in Massachusetts including principal, interest, and Massachusetts's average property tax rate of 1.14%.

Massachusetts Property Tax Note: Massachusetts has a 1.14% average property tax rate, slightly above the national average, with wide variation by city and town. Boston has a lower effective rate due to commercial tax sharing, but suburban towns often have high rates. Massachusetts has a residential exemption available in some jurisdictions that lowers taxes for primary homeowners. Massachusetts is one of the most expensive housing markets in the Northeast.

Your Mortgage Details

Massachusetts average: 1.14%

Results update automatically

Massachusetts Monthly Payment

Estimated

Loading your results…

Results update automatically as you change values

Median Massachusetts home ($600,000) — 20% down — 7% rate — 30yr

ComponentMonthlyAnnual
Principal & Interest$3,193.45$38,321
Property Tax (1.14%)$570.00$6,840
Homeowners Insurance$150.00$1,800
Total PITI$3,913.45$46,961

Total interest over 30yr: $669,643. PMI not included.

Massachusetts Mortgage Math: Property Tax, Insurance, and PITI

Your Massachusetts mortgage payment has four components — the PITI breakdown: Principal, Interest, Taxes, and Insurance. Principal and interest are determined by your loan amount, rate, and term. Property tax and homeowners insurance are usually escrowed monthly. In Massachusetts, the average effective property tax rate is 1.14% — near the US average of 1.10%.

On the median Massachusetts home ($600,000), the property tax line alone runs roughly $6,840 annually — about $570 per month before factoring in any local supplemental levies. Homeowners insurance typically adds $1,200–$2,400/year depending on coverage and risk profile, with hurricane/wildfire-prone areas paying more.

Massachusetts Home Prices in National Context

The median home price in Massachusetts is $600,000, 43.1% above the US median of $419,200. Relative to Massachusetts's median household income of $89,026, the median home costs about 6.7× annual income — a useful affordability benchmark. Home-price-to-income ratios above 5× typically signal a stretched market; below 3× indicates affordability headroom.

Massachusetts has a 1.14% average property tax rate, slightly above the national average, with wide variation by city and town. Boston has a lower effective rate due to commercial tax sharing, but suburban towns often have high rates. Massachusetts has a residential exemption available in some jurisdictions that lowers taxes for primary homeowners. Massachusetts is one of the most expensive housing markets in the Northeast. Local variation within Massachusetts can be substantial — coastal/metro counties typically run well above the state median, while inland and rural counties can sit far below. Use the calculator above with your specific target price, and verify the property tax line by looking up the assessed value and millage rate for your target county.

Affordability Math: How Much Home Can You Actually Carry?

Conventional underwriting caps total housing costs at 28% of gross monthly income (the "front-end" ratio) and total debt at 36%–43% (the "back-end" ratio). On the Massachusetts median household income of $89,026, that's a maximum housing budget of about $2,077 per month. With Massachusetts's higher-than-average property taxes, that budget supports a mortgage in the range of $222,565–$311,591 at current 30-year fixed rates.

The 20% down payment is a useful benchmark — it eliminates private mortgage insurance (PMI) and signals creditworthiness — but isn't required. FHA loans accept 3.5% down with a credit score of 580+; VA loans (eligible veterans) and USDA loans (rural areas) can offer 0% down. Each path has tradeoffs in upfront fees, ongoing insurance, and rate competitiveness; run the math both ways before committing.

Closing Costs and Ongoing Ownership Costs in Massachusetts

Beyond the down payment, budget 2%–5% of the loan amount for closing costs: lender origination fees, title insurance, appraisal, recording fees, prepaid taxes and insurance, and (in some states) transfer taxes. On a $480,000 loan, that's roughly $14,400–$24,000 due at closing. Some sellers will credit closing costs in soft markets — always ask.

Plan for ongoing maintenance reserves of 1%–2% of home value annually — about $9,000/year on the Massachusetts median home. HOA dues (if applicable), utilities, and major capital expenses (roof, HVAC, hot water heater) accumulate. The all-in cost of homeownership in Massachusetts typically runs 1.3×–1.5× the mortgage payment alone once tax, insurance, maintenance, and major repairs are included over a typical holding period.