Large final payment due at maturity after smaller scheduled installments leave part of the principal still outstanding.
A balloon payment is a large final payment due at the end of a loan term because the earlier scheduled payments did not fully repay the principal.
Balloon payments matter because they change where repayment risk sits. Lower periodic payments can make a loan look easier to carry in the short run, but the borrower still faces a concentrated maturity event later.
That structure shows up in mortgages, commercial lending, auto finance, and bridge-style borrowing where the borrower expects to refinance, sell an asset, or use a later cash inflow to retire the balance.
The balloon payment is simply the principal balance that remains after the scheduled installments have been made:
In practice, lenders often calculate monthly payments on a longer amortization schedule while setting the legal maturity date much earlier.
| Structure | Principal during the term | Final payment |
| — | — | — |
| Fully amortizing loan | Gradually reduced to zero | None beyond the last regular installment |
| Balloon structure | Partially reduced | Large final payment |
| Bullet structure | Often barely reduced at all | Most or all principal due at maturity |
A borrower takes a five-year loan whose monthly payment is calculated as if the balance would amortize over twenty years. The monthly payment is lower than on a true five-year amortizing loan, but after five years a sizable unpaid balance remains.
That remaining balance is the balloon payment.
A Bullet Repayment structure usually leaves nearly all principal until maturity. A balloon payment often appears after at least some principal reduction during the term.
The structure can improve near-term affordability, but it often makes the borrower more dependent on refinancing conditions or asset-sale timing later.
Balloon Loan: A loan product built around this repayment feature.
Bullet Loan: A structure that usually leaves even more principal to maturity.
Interest-Only Loan: May produce a large end balance because principal is not amortized during the interest-only phase.
Balloon Mortgage: The mortgage-specific version of the same repayment design.
Refinancing: A common way borrowers plan to handle the final payment.