Wrong vs right
Two percentages can show 3.9 and 3.9 and still describe different charges. Match the dollar amount and the month-or-year convention before you pick a “winner.”
For affordability, watch for percentage points versus percent change, monthly versus annual without converting, and interest on balance A labeled like interest on balance B.
Why rechecking math is not enough
Rechecking arithmetic on the wrong setup does not help. When two apps fight, compare definitions—balance, period, fees—not keystrokes.
Read Related lesson and Another angle as two angles on the same bill. If both stories match after you align bases, you can stop second-guessing.
Check your numbers now
Common mix-up
Do not stack a monthly fee next to an annual APR until you put them on the same clock. “No interest for six months” is not the same as “no cost” if fees add to principal.
What went wrong
| Easy assumption | What actually matters |
|---|---|
| “The % tells the whole story.” | Dollars = rate × balance × time, plus fees in cash. |
| “I triple-checked the math.” | Triple-checking the wrong balance still yields the wrong payment. |
| “Close enough to decide.” | Close enough for dinner conversation is not close enough for a signature. |
Same digits, different rules Line up amount and period, then compare
Try a wrong balance once
Core lesson
Go deeper: How Much House Can You Afford? — if one number still does not feel right, enter it in the calculators above and change one input at a time to see what drives the result.
Use the calculator
FAQ
- Where is the main lesson?
How Much House Can You Afford? pulls the topic together in one place, with links to related lessons.
- Which calculator should I open first?
Use the first tool in the list for most questions. If you are reconciling payment rows on a schedule, pick amortization when it appears in the list.