Newsletter Subscribe
Enter your email address below and subscribe to our newsletter
Enter your email address below and subscribe to our newsletter
A balloon mortgage offers low early payments followed by a large final lump sum, common in commercial and short-term financing.
A Balloon Mortgage is a home loan with low monthly payments for a set term, followed by a large lump-sum payment (the “balloon”) at the end. It offers short-term affordability but carries significant refinancing or repayment risk.
Definition
A Balloon Mortgage is a partially amortized mortgage where borrowers make smaller monthly payments during the loan term, with the remaining principal due in a single final payment.
Balloon mortgages typically have terms lasting 5–7 years but are amortized as if they were 30-year mortgages. This creates significantly lower monthly payments but leaves a large outstanding balance due at the end.
They are favored in commercial real estate and by borrowers planning to sell or refinance before the balloon date. However, economic downturns, falling home values, or rising interest rates can make repayment or refinancing difficult.
Balloon Payment = Loan Principal – Principal Paid During Term
Balloon mortgages increase access to credit but elevate systemic risk during periods of tight credit. Lenders use them to manage interest-rate exposure and accelerate capital recycling.
| Type | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Interest-Only Balloon Mortgage | Only interest paid; principal due at end. | Bridge loans |
| Partially Amortized Balloon Mortgage | Some principal paid; large remainder due. | 5/7-year hybrid loans |
Lower early payments and short-term affordability.
Borrowers must pay the remaining principal, refinance, or sell.
Q3: Are balloon mortgages safe?
They carry high risk if economic or personal circumstances change.