Biweekly mortgage payments are pitched as a magic wealth hack and dismissed as a useless gimmick — both takes are wrong. The truth is specific and quantifiable: it works, it works for a precise arithmetic reason, and there is one common version of it that is a genuine ripoff. Here is the honest math.
What “biweekly” actually does
You pay half your monthly payment every two weeks instead of the full amount once a month. A year has 52 weeks = 26 half-payments = 13 full monthly payments, not 12. That 13th payment is pure extra principal, applied automatically.
There is no magic. It is one extra payment a year, disguised as a scheduling change. The benefit is real precisely because extra principal early in a loan removes all the future interest that principal would have generated.
The real numbers
On a $320,000 loan at 6.5% over 30 years:
- Standard monthly: ~$2,023/month, ~$408,000 total interest, paid off in 30 years.
- Biweekly: ~$1,011 every two weeks, ~$315,000 total interest, paid off in roughly 24 years.
That is about $93,000 of interest eliminated and nearly 6 years off the loan — at 6.5%. (At lower rates the dollar figure shrinks; at higher rates it grows.) See your exact figures in the biweekly mortgage calculator.
So is it worth it? Yes — with three conditions
Worth it when:
- Your lender applies the half-payments to principal as received (or offers a true biweekly program). This is the make-or-break condition — see below.
- You have no higher-interest debt. Credit cards at 24% beat a 6.5% mortgage every time — pay those first.
- The budget rhythm of two-week halves actually helps you stay consistent.
The arithmetic is identical to simply adding 1/12 of your payment to each monthly payment yourself. Biweekly is a behavioral tool that automates the discipline. If you’ll reliably DIY the extra 1/12, that works exactly as well — for free.
The ripoff version to avoid
Third-party “biweekly conversion services” charge a setup fee ($300–$500) plus per-transaction or monthly fees to do something you can do yourself for nothing. They collect your half-payments and forward them — sometimes only monthly, which means zero benefit and a fee on top.
Worse: many loan servicers, if you just send half-payments on your own, hold the money and only apply it as a full payment monthly. Result: no early principal, no benefit. Always confirm in writing that your servicer applies extra funds to principal as received, or enroll in their official biweekly program.
Biweekly vs other payoff strategies
- Biweekly vs extra monthly: mathematically the same if the dollar amounts match. Pick whichever you’ll actually stick to.
- Biweekly vs recast: a recast lowers your required payment after a lump sum; biweekly shortens the term. Different goals.
- Biweekly vs invest the difference: paying down a 6.5% loan is a guaranteed 6.5% return. Compare that to your expected after-tax investment return and risk tolerance. At 2026 mortgage rates, extra principal is far more competitive with investing than it was in the 3% era.
See how it stacks against straight extra principal in the mortgage payoff calculator and against term choice in the 15-year vs 30-year calculator.
Frequently asked
Is biweekly really 13 payments a year? Yes. 26 half-payments = 13 monthly payments. The extra one is the entire source of the savings.
Will it lower my monthly payment? No. It shortens the term and cuts total interest; it does not reduce your obligation. For a lower required payment you’d recast or refinance.
Do I need my lender’s permission? You don’t need permission to pay extra principal. You may need their cooperation for a true biweekly schedule. If they won’t apply half-payments as received, just pay 1/12 extra monthly — identical result, no cooperation needed.
Is paying a service ever worth it? No. Anything they do, you can do free. Keep the fee.
Does it help more early in the loan? Dramatically. Extra principal in year 2 erases far more lifetime interest than the same dollar in year 20.
Bottom line
Biweekly mortgage payments are worth it — not because of any trick, but because they force one extra principal payment a year, early, when it matters most. Just do it the free way (your servicer’s program or DIY 1/12 extra monthly), never through a paid conversion service, and confirm the money actually hits principal.
Run your own loan through the biweekly mortgage calculator — the exact dollars and years saved will make the decision obvious.
Educational guide, not financial advice.