Hello everyone,
I was thinking about my mortgage the other day and how I can get it to perform better for me. Its only been recently that the light bulb has turned on inside my head and I've realized that my finances could be a lot better than what they are.
So I've been told that re-financing is not the best option for everyone. Somewhere around the 5 year mark your bank will call you and offer to reduce your monthly repayments by $100 or so. Most people jump at this chance with out any real thought.
I am sure I am not telling you guys anything new, I mean I joined up here to learn, but for those that don't know or may be looking at refinancing here is the catch:
[[Skip this section if you already know]]
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At the beginning of the life of your loan you are paying mainly interest. You pay very little of the principal of the loan. As the loan progresses over its 40years or so, you start paying back the principal of the loan.
So after 5 years or so you start to hit the sweet spot. The payment of your principal is starting to accelerate and by the time you get to the end of your loan everything is upside down from the banks point of view. If you imagine in the beginning your monthly payment consists of 95% interest, and 5% principal towards the end it gets inverted and your paying 95% principal and 5% interest.
So if the bank can get you to refinance they will work out what you owe over the next 40 years again. Originally you might have owed 500,000 over 40 years and now you've paid back 10,000 so 490,000 over 40 years would translate to a lower monthly repayment.
Sounds great, but your back to paying 95% interest and 5% principal.
If the bank can keep you in their sweet spot, the first 5 or 10 years of the loan, the majority of your repayments are going to be eaten up by insurance. YOU'LL NEVER OWN YOUR HOME!!
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So my question is this:
Could you (and is it worth it) refinance to reduce your monthly payment, but keep paying what you would have if you did not refinance? That way, your now paying off a larger portion of your principal with the same payment. Has anyone looked into this? Maybe you end up in the exact same position as if you didn't refinance?
Not sure if this was the correct place to ask this, or even the correct forum but I figure you guys are onto it with money matters
VG.
I was thinking about my mortgage the other day and how I can get it to perform better for me. Its only been recently that the light bulb has turned on inside my head and I've realized that my finances could be a lot better than what they are.
So I've been told that re-financing is not the best option for everyone. Somewhere around the 5 year mark your bank will call you and offer to reduce your monthly repayments by $100 or so. Most people jump at this chance with out any real thought.
I am sure I am not telling you guys anything new, I mean I joined up here to learn, but for those that don't know or may be looking at refinancing here is the catch:
[[Skip this section if you already know]]
*******************************************************************************
At the beginning of the life of your loan you are paying mainly interest. You pay very little of the principal of the loan. As the loan progresses over its 40years or so, you start paying back the principal of the loan.
So after 5 years or so you start to hit the sweet spot. The payment of your principal is starting to accelerate and by the time you get to the end of your loan everything is upside down from the banks point of view. If you imagine in the beginning your monthly payment consists of 95% interest, and 5% principal towards the end it gets inverted and your paying 95% principal and 5% interest.
So if the bank can get you to refinance they will work out what you owe over the next 40 years again. Originally you might have owed 500,000 over 40 years and now you've paid back 10,000 so 490,000 over 40 years would translate to a lower monthly repayment.
Sounds great, but your back to paying 95% interest and 5% principal.
If the bank can keep you in their sweet spot, the first 5 or 10 years of the loan, the majority of your repayments are going to be eaten up by insurance. YOU'LL NEVER OWN YOUR HOME!!
*****************************************************************************
So my question is this:
Could you (and is it worth it) refinance to reduce your monthly payment, but keep paying what you would have if you did not refinance? That way, your now paying off a larger portion of your principal with the same payment. Has anyone looked into this? Maybe you end up in the exact same position as if you didn't refinance?
Not sure if this was the correct place to ask this, or even the correct forum but I figure you guys are onto it with money matters
VG.