How Good Are Mortgage Overpayment Calculators
June 22nd, 2009 by admin
Well take a look at fixed rate mortgages and how they can be good for you.
We’ll also take a peek at how much you could save with an overpayment calculator.
The fixed rate gives you security for a while & the overpayment calculator might give you a pleasant surprise.
A fixed rate mortgage is a special type of mortgage where you have a fixed interest period.
A fixed period of interest that may be a couple or several years.
The interest rate you pay is locked; therefore your monthly payments are also locked.
What, if any, are the up sides to fixed rate mortgages?
Because your payments stay the same you don’t get ups and downs in your monthly payments.
You can benefit by knowing your monthly payment is fixed which allows you to budget more effectively.
Bank base rates may rise drastically, however yours will be the same because it’s fixed.
In the last few decades we have seen interest rates almost double in a few short months.
If the rates rose drastically over a short term those on variable mortgages could struggle to meet payments.
There can be certain circumstances when a fixed rate mortgage may not be right for you.
The arrival of a new child could mean you need a bigger home and need to move. These are reasons to avoid fixed rate mortgages.
Any situation which sees you changing mortgage can invoke a horrid redemption penalty on you.
Fixed rate mortgages nearly always come bundled with a redemption penalty.
These redemption penalties can hit you hard just when you don’t need it.
These unexpected charges can hurt. Consider carefully whether a fixed rate is the one for you.
It’s worth thinking about paying a bit extra each month in addition to whatever you normally pay.
You may not realise but you can pay any amount over the minimum monthly payment.
It’s not often, if at all, that a lender will tell you it’s possible to pay more than your normal minimum monthly payment.
What are the up sides to paying extra each and every month?
You can easily shave years of your mortgage. Be debt free much earlier.
You also save a lot of money in the process, sometimes a staggering amount.
In what way does a mortgage overpayment calculator work?
You can enter all the relevant figures from your particular deal.
You can then play around by changing the figure you can afford to overpay.
The calculator tells you how many years you will knock off.
You get to see how much money you could possibly save.
Both the years and cash saved obviously increase if you put in a higher overpayment figure.
You may be surprised at some of the savings you can make.
If we take a mortgage of 100,000 borrowed over 25 years and assume you get an average 5% interest rate.
Just by paying an extra 50 every month could see you knock over 3 years off and save over 12 grand.
Nice savings on a 50 extra payment. But what happens if you pay an extra 100 though?
We’ll use the same mortgage example figures but pay 100 extra.
You get to shave over 6 years off the length and over 20 grand saved. That’s pretty good.
An extra advantage is you won’t have any payments to make during the last few years of the mortgage.
Being free of your mortgage chains a few years early is a definite reality if you can pay extra now.
Of course your lender will never tell you this, you have to discover this on your own.
In our example where we saved six years off the length with a hundred a month overpayment.
This shortening of the mortgage by six years saves you another 40,000 or more.
You don’t pay this money to your lender so you get to keep it, either save it or spend it.
There you have a few benefits of going for a fixed rate mortgage.
Not only do you get set monthly payments, you get to sleep easy at night because of it.
We also had a look at a mortgage overpayment calculator and the potential savings that can be had.
