Hi folks,
I've been onto my bank (BOI) this morning, enquiring about how to go about making extra monthly over-payments onto my mortgage, as I'm on a tracker rate and my repayments are a good bit lower than they were 12 months ago.
Anyway, having read around on here, my understanding was that I needed to ensure that they are clear I want to make a "capital" overpayment, that my extra cash would not go on the interest.
However, the guy in the bank didn't seem to know what I was on about. He said the interest on my loan is calculated daily, any extra payments I make would reduce the capital owed, thereby also reducing the interest repayment owed. He insisted it was as simple as that. There are no hidden charges or extras, all we need do is send in a letter stating the extra amount we wish to pay, and they will do the rest... that stating we want to make "capital overpayment" would make no difference to how they'd do it!
This sounds to me like my overpayment would go towards a combination of capital + interest, but I'm really not sure.
Any advice ?
I've been onto my bank (BOI) this morning, enquiring about how to go about making extra monthly over-payments onto my mortgage, as I'm on a tracker rate and my repayments are a good bit lower than they were 12 months ago.
Anyway, having read around on here, my understanding was that I needed to ensure that they are clear I want to make a "capital" overpayment, that my extra cash would not go on the interest.
However, the guy in the bank didn't seem to know what I was on about. He said the interest on my loan is calculated daily, any extra payments I make would reduce the capital owed, thereby also reducing the interest repayment owed. He insisted it was as simple as that. There are no hidden charges or extras, all we need do is send in a letter stating the extra amount we wish to pay, and they will do the rest... that stating we want to make "capital overpayment" would make no difference to how they'd do it!
This sounds to me like my overpayment would go towards a combination of capital + interest, but I'm really not sure.
Any advice ?