I have the same facility with BoI. It's not in my contract either and my assumption is that they can withdraw it at will if they want.My worry is this 10% overpayment benefit will be revoked.
This came up before in another thread. @Brendan Burgess takes the view that Permanent TSB would get in trouble if they revoked the 10% overpayment facility while you are still on your UB fixed rate.My worry is this 10% overpayment benefit will be revoked.
Will I be able to avail of the 10% overpayment feature on my fixed rate when my mortgage is transferred to Permanent TSB Group?
While we can reassure you that the 10% overpayment feature remains available and unchanged, we are unable to confirm until final arrangements are made with the new provider of your loan, whether this feature will continue unchanged when your mortgage is transferred. If you wish to make an overpayment, please log on to Manage My Mortgage.
@Wiresandmore That's not exactly what @lexio7 asked. They asked whether the 10% facility will be kept by PTSB. Ulster Bank's FAQ says:
PTSB don't allow any overpayments without penalty, i.e., you have to pay the pro rata break fee.What’s PTSB’s position on overpayment?
PTSB don't allow any overpayments without penalty, i.e., you have to pay the pro rata break fee.
Overpayment Options
A. Lump Sum Payment: If you’ve received a bonus or an inheritance or any other large amount of money, you can put that lump sum towards your mortgage to reduce your monthly repayments or the term.
B. Regular Overpayments: Regular overpayments are where you make an overpayment on your mortgage. This allows you to reduce the term of your mortgage and pay less interest overall or build up credit on your account to allow you to take a payment holiday at a future date.
Do you mean that you expect to almost clear your mortgage in 2027?I switched 65% of the mortgage to the UB 2.2% rate with a deliberate plan to pay off the remaining 35% when it moves to variable Oct 23. That gets me below a specific threshold I’ve been targeting and leaves the payments very manageable through to 2027 when I should be able to pay most of that off too.
Do you mean that you expect to almost clear your mortgage in 2027?
Happy days!I expect it to be very substantially lower (target is balance of around 100K).
Well, yes - we’ll see. Best laid plans and all that….. !Happy days!
No break fee has been charged on our regular overrepayment (note: I'm on a variable mortgage rate).@Solution Did they ever impose a break fee / early breakage charge on you for making these overpayments?
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