If you have no other pressing need for the money and would not end up borrowing at personal loan rates later on for something then reducing your borrowings on the new house would make sense. Reducing the amount you borrow rather than reducing the mortgage after drawing it down would make most sense since this would also reduce the level of mortgage protection life assurance cover that you need and hence your monthly premiums for this.We're so used to being broke that we don't know what to do about this! We will have an extra 12000 left over after the sale of our house. Should we reduce our initial mortgage amount before our purchase goes through? Or pay a lump sum off the mortgage after it goes through? Will either of these make a huge difference??
Definitely consider borrowing up to €12,000 less and then plug the overpayment figures into Karl Jeacle's mortgage calculator to see the savings attributable to your accelerated repayment of the mortgage.We intend on over paying the mortgage by €500pm anyway. We're just wondering what kind of impact this will have on the term of our mortgage really.
It is as far as I can see. €129K is not a huge mortgage and the repayments (note that the calculator does not take account of owner occupier mortgage interest relief, mortgage protection life assurance, home insurance etc.) at around €600 are not excessive (although that depends on your monthly income). As such you might want to reduce the term and make the overpayment of €500 part of your "normal" repayment and thus also reduce your mortgage protection life assurance costs even further. You might also want to check that (a) you are getting the best mortgage rate deal for your circumstances and (b) you shop around for mortgage protection life assurance and home insurance cover.OMG! That will shorten the term of our mortgage by 22yrs according to that calculator. That can't be right???
Sorry - playing catch up here composing and posting while you do the same!Believe it or not they insisted that due to my husbands earnings that we take a 30yr mortgage and can reduce it at a later date. We can definitely afford to reduce to a 15yr mortgage as our current mortgage payments are almost €300pm more than the new mortgage payments, plus we have no personal loads(home improvement loans on current home) so the plan is to at very least over pay the mortgage for the fixed rate period then reduce the term.
Thanks for you help.
Deb
This might not be a good idea! Making accelerated capital repayments on a fixed rate loan could lead to penalties.so the plan is to at very least over pay the mortgage for the fixed rate period
What additional loans are you referring to (type, term, rate, institution etc.)? This is all a bit confusing because you have not posted all details in one go. My previous comments were predicated on the assumption that you did not have any other loans (in particular unsecured personal loans at higher than mortgage rates). Please post details of these. In general spare cash should be used to reduce the most expensive borrowings so it may be that you should be reducing/clearing other loans before reducing your mortgage borrowings or initial need for same.Total (net)earnings are approx 2,600pm(plus 458pm child benefit which is not considered 'earnings' but is currently paying ONE of our loans!). The bank is PTSB and my husband is a PAYE worker.
Fair point. There's no one size fits all answer here. Personally I prefer to minimise costs but for somebody who might have concerns about future ability to meet higher repayments the breathing space of a longer term might be useful. However 30 years for €129K seems a bit excessive on the face of things but it obviously fdepends on the household income and other debts etc.Notwithstanding the extra costs of life assurance, I personally don't think its a bad idea to go for the longer term with overpayments rather than shortening the term due to the flexibility it gives you should you find yourself in circumstances which might limit your ability to repay the mortgage.
The borrowed amount will be 128000 over 30yrs first 2yrs at 3.99%(unsure after that) and monthly payments will be €1010.35
This does not make sense. For €129K at 3.99% over 30 years Karl Jeacle's calculator gives approximate repayments of €615.12. Do you mean that the repayments will be c. €1,100 when the €500 overpayment is added?Sorry! The total amount we'll be paying per month is 1110.35
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