This is probably what you are referring to that AIB brought in in 2023, that you can overpay 5K worth per year on fixed rate.I saw another thread here posted by RedOnion which explained that with AIB you dont incurr any charge if you make overpayments on a fixed mortgage as the newer fixed rates are lower than the existing ones.
Point 2 above from AIB's t&c's confirms that you will be compared to both the 4 & 5 year rates and the most beneficial to you will be used.Additional information regarding the calculation
We take a number of other factors into account as described below. These will result in a lower ERC than if we did not take these into account. For example:
1. We consider the reducing balance nature of your mortgage, which will mean that your ERC will be less than the indicative figure produced by the A x U X D% formula.
2. When the remaining term does not exactly match a term for which there is a rate available, we will use the two closest rates and apply the most beneficial to you. For example, if you have 18 months remaining on your fixed term, we will use the more beneficial of the 12 and 24 month rates in our calculations.
However, I phoned the AIB mortgage advisor today and was told "there's penalties if you fix, not if you're variable". I pressed the issue a bit and they eventually gave me the number for the team who supposedly calculate the penalties. I phoned them and the woman I spoke to told me that I would be compared to the fixed term I initially signed up for. I asked the question multiple times and even gave the example of...if I fix for 5 years green rate and after 4 years I want to pay a lump sum, am I compared to the current 1 year fixed or is it the 5 year fixed green? She was determined that I would be locked in to comparisons with the 5 year fixed green. Looking at their own example that you have shown here that seems wrong. I really don't know.
I have far more faith in randomers on the internet than the crowd in AIB! That's interesting that you have been in the same position. I'm gonna crunch the numbers again in the morning and might send AIB the query again in writing to see what the say. My prediction is "we can only calculate the break fee when the lump sum is requested" for the 10th time. There must be just one lad in there that can actually do the calculation, and a team of people to put people off doing it! 2.15%! How long ago was that??I can understand your concerns as to who to believe, the AIB mortgage advisor or a randomer on the internet
But in all seriousness, I've had to explain this to them myself when making overpayments (I'm on the 2.15% green still). I've been told to wait for a break fee calculation before transferring funds because they simply don't understand their own T&C's
Ultimately it is your money and decision so I would suggest reading your Letter of Offer and all T&C's again and make your own conclusion.
If you are in any doubt then go variable and fix as soon as you make lump sum. It won't cost you that much in the greater scheme of things to do this
The most important part is if you do your calculation per the Regulatory Information sheet guideline/formula and the numbers work out to 0 or negative, you don't have to pay when doing the overpayment on fixed rate. AIB have to follow the same rules.I have far more faith in randomers on the internet than the crowd in AIB! That's interesting that you have been in the same position. I'm gonna crunch the numbers again in the morning and might send AIB the query again in writing to see what the say. My prediction is "we can only calculate the break fee when the lump sum is requested" for the 10th time. There must be just one lad in there that can actually do the calculation, and a team of people to put people off doing it! 2.15%! How long ago was that??
Probably more so being incompetent than lied..I can't help but think that AIB deliberately lied to me. I find it very hard to believe that someone who works on the team that calculates ERC fees wouldn't have an understanding of the concept. Also it seems that others have had a very similar experience with them.
I will be in the 50 to 80% LTV band, so have the choice of variable at 3.95% or 5 year fixed green at 3.55%.
The gist of how this will work is that you're on the 5 years green rate which will be the lowest of all the 5 years fixed rate AIB offer currently when compared (Even the 1, 2, 3 or 4 years fixed rate are all higher than the 5 years green fixed rate [at the time of writing]).If AIB were to drop there 5 year fixed green rate would I then face ERC fees? @_OkGo_ how could I refix if AIB dropped their rates? Would that not entail a break fee?
I can foresee that you will need to get your new valuation done by AIB approved valuer beforehand. Once you have that done, using the above mentioned method, your ERC will be 0 as already demonstrated. Therefore you can break the 5 years green fixed rate contract you have currently and re-sign again for another 5 years green fixed rate with the new LTV band thus effectively reset the clock and get the new lower fixed rate.Another question. If my lump payment changed the LTV to <50% (which is currently 3.45%) would that change the outcome of the calculation?
As I have said, in your case you will be fixed on 3.55% now and if you look at the current rate from the table (depending on when you do this, year wise) it will range from 1 to 5 years but 1 to 5 years have a range difference of 1% to 1.25% respectively when compared to 3.55%.I don't understand how I would be able to refix the 5 year green without a break fee if the rates drop as would that not mean that there is a lower rate that they can compare me to?
I don't understand how I would be able to refix the 5 year green without a break fee if the rates drop as would that not mean that there is a lower rate that they can compare me to?
All of our overpayments have been by transfer on the app. For the first overpayment, I sent a small amount and 2 weeks later received a letter confirming the new monthly payment and that a zero ERC applied. Basically I wanted to check that the default was to reduce the monthly payment and maintain the term. Since then we've increased how much has been overpaid without any issue.My last mortgage I just stayed Variable the whole time because I knew I would pay it off sooner. Was very handy just using the app to may additional payments. Seems if you fix you have to fill out forms and wait for responses my mail?
The formula is the Regulatory Information Sheet, they can't deviate from that. They 'could' revise it but I would expect that they will notify their customer if it happens.("there's a formula")
Your scenario 1, 2 and 3 looks OK.Do the ERC numbers in the below table look right? Effectively, if all rates drop but their standard fixed rates are higher than my rate there is no ERC. If the standard fix rates drop below my rate the ERC considers the applicable standard rate (not the even lower Green rate)
Example 1: You fix your mortgage loan at a fixed interest rate of 5.25% for a period of 5 years (60 months). After 3 years (36 months), you repay your mortgage loan in full. The outstanding amount on your mortgage loan at that time is €100,000. The applicable fixed interest rate used is the 2 year fixed interest rate being offered by the Bank as there is still 2 years (24 months) remaining on your original fixed term, e.g. 3.0%. In this case, ERC = (A= €100,000) x (U = 24 months /12) x (D% = 5.25%-3.0%= 2.25%) = €4,500.
We will also use a market interest rate to calculate the D% component in the formula above. In that case, D% would be the difference between the market interest rate applicable at the start of the fixed interest rate term, and the market interest rate applicable at the time of the early repayment or conversion, for the unexpired fixed interest rate term. Note: Market interest rate is determined by the wholesale market. The market interest rates used will be as of close of business on the previous working day to the day the calculation is being completed.
One thing I wonder is, could AIB come along and say that as I'm on the Green rate, the other rates aren't "applicable" as per clause 3 referenced above? Or is applicability purely related to period remaining?
They refused to clarify how the ERC worked. Everyone I managed to speak to had no idea and they would not find out or put me through to the right person. I escalated it to supervisor to no avail. Gave up in the end@Pneuma hello reading this thread because I also wanted to get an understanding on what rate they compare to when calculating ERC. Did you ever get an answer on whether AIB will compare to the new green rate when calculating ERC? Thanks a mill.
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