If you reached agreement to go interest only, then the payment due should have been reduced to, say €2,000 per month. If you made these payments as they became due, your arrears should still be €6,000.
I got back a final demand for the arrears plus what they perceived to be arrears i.e. if there were no MARP in place.The amount you were in arrears when you came to the agreement.
4K
What was agreed.
A figure below interest only as this is all I could afford due to a drastic drop in salary.
What was paid
I stuck to my side of the agreement and continued to make the agreed repayments each month.
What the latest letter says.
one of the things the bank is required to do under the marp is to send you out updated statements included in which is the 'true' extent of your actual arrears i.e. the amount you are behind on your actual loan agreement.
I was not aware of this and it seems perverse to me. What is the source for this?
Hi Wishes
I'm a bit confused when you say the bank refused to capitalise your arrears.
Write off the arrears and pay increased monthly payments over the remaining period
Let’s say you lose your job in the above example, but you get a new job in July and you are able to service your mortgage again, but you are not able to pay the arrears.
The bank may agree to write off the arrears – this is also known as “capitalizing the arrears”. This does not save you anything and it does not cost you anything. At the end of June, you will still owe €61,200.
The bank will increase the monthly repayment to €646 per month and this is sufficient to pay off your loan within the original timeframe.
Arrears: Arrears arise on a mortgage loan account where a borrower has not made a full mortgage repayment, or only makes a partial mortgage repayment, as per the original mortgage contract, by the scheduled due date.
When arrears arise on a borrower’s mortgage loan account and remain outstanding 31 days from the date the arrears arose, a lender must:
a) inform each borrower and any guarantor on the mortgage, unless the mortgage loan contract explicitly prohibits such information to be given to the guarantor, of the status of the account in writing, within 3 working days. The letter must include the following information:
i) the date the mortgage fell into arrears;
ii) the number and total amount of full or partial payments missed;
iii) the monetary amount of the arrears to date;
The definition of arrears in the MAC is incorrect
"Arrears: Arrears arise on a mortgage loan account where a borrower has not made a full mortgage repayment, or only makes a partial mortgage repayment, as per the original mortgage contract, by the scheduled due date."
This is clearly not correct.
At its simplest, if the lender agrees to extend the term of my loan, thus reducing my repayments, and I keep up those repayments, I am not in arrears.
If I have built up real arrears and the bank agrees to capitalise them, then I am no longer in arrears. But according to this definition, I am still in arrears.
The definition should be changed to
Arrears: Arrears arise on a mortgage loan account where a borrower has not made a full mortgage repayment, or only makes a partial mortgage repayment, as per the original mortgage contract or per any agreed revised repayment schedule, by the scheduled due date.
Hi all, I met with them today to discuss the drastic jump in arrears from 4k to 20k. I can confirm that Roudolf and Wbbs are correct. I would have posted here earlier but it has took me the day to digest this information. I truely am lost for words.
There is absolutely no way I can afford to pay the 20k arrears and yet they will not capitilise them. In other words the debt will keep increasing and increasing if I cannot work my way out of MARP.
Just wondering - we are told that we are in arrears and we are making MARP arrangements, but we are still several years ahead of our "Original mortgage contract" due to a lump sum payment we made a few years ago. Should we be contact the bnak and tell them that we are not in arrears according to this definition and will not make any more payments until we are back on schedule?
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