You have, I believe, the legal right to pay a lump sum of any amount off your mortgage at any time. (If you are on a fixed rate, there may be an early repayment charge, but that does not apply in your case.)The EBS keep telling us this is not possible as we can only pay down the lump sum and reduce the monthly repayment amount or else reduce the years and keep the same level of monthly repayments but not both.
You have, I believe, the legal right to pay a lump sum of any amount off your mortgage at any time. (If you are on a fixed rate, there may be an early repayment charge, but that does not apply in your case.)
But if you pay a lump sum off your mortgage, your lender is not obliged to allow you to shorten the remaining term. (Some lenders allow this but it's not a legal right.)
EBS might allow you to do the following:
One risk with all this faffing about is that EBS could increase their fixed rates before you re-fix (assuming your plan is to re-fix with them).
- Ask them to reduce the term to 15 years while keeping the monthly payment the same
- This will require you to pay a lump sum
- Once that is done, pay off another lump sum
- This will keep the term the same but reduce the monthly repayment
Overpaying your mortgage/reducing your balance may not be the best use of your money. Your priorities should usually be:
in approximately that order. Consider posting a thread about your situation in the Money Makeover forum.
- Paying off expensive debt (credit cards, personal loans, car loans, etc.)
- Building up an emergency fund in a savings/current account (3 to 6 months' living expenses)
- Saving money for any expenses you will have over the next few years (kids; buying a car; childcare; home renovations; adult children going to college, etc.)
- Maxing out your pension contributions (very large tax relief is given)
- Overpaying your mortgage
Obviously, your monthly repayments if you shorten the term to 15 years would be higher than if it remains at 21 years after the luimp sum payment. But you want to pay it off sooner and save a load of interest payments, right?
But, if you don't refix - though you very probably should!! - you can normally make monthly overpayments without penalty. Some providers will allow certain overpayments even on a fixed term.
This will have the practical effect of shortening the remaining term without penalty - as it will be paid off quicker! - BUT with the important quirk that you are not *obliged* to make those overpayments. So if you prefer to use the overpayment cash one month for a treat, it's not a problem; you aren't in a contract to pay the higher amount.
If you type or paste this into Excel or Google Sheets etc and just change the 3.65 to whatever %rate you are on, it will give you your monthly payments for a 15 year term.
=-PMT((3.65*0.01)/12,(15*12),(270000-125000),,)
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