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How to Reduce Your Mortgage Loan
One Additional Mortgage Payment a Year
There's a simple trick to significantly reduce the length of your mortgage and save you thousands of dollars. The trick is to make one extra mortgage payment a year and apply that payment toward your loan's principal.
This is the method being used by "Bi-Weekly Mortgage Savings Programs". Only, when you do it yourself, you don't pay a third party unnecessary set-up costs and fees!
Example: $100,000 loan, 30-year mortgage, 6.5% fixed interest rate
|
Extra Mortgage Payments/ Year |
Principal & Interest |
Additional Monthly Payment |
SAVINGS |
Total Paid |
# of Years |
|
0 |
$632.07 |
0 |
0 |
$227,542.98 |
29.92 / 359 mos. |
|
1 |
$632.07 |
$52.68 |
$29,088.02 |
$198,454.96 |
24.12 / 290 mos. |
|
2 |
$632.07 |
$105.35 |
$46,492.13 |
$181,050.85 |
20.5 / 246 mos. |
|
3 |
$632.07 |
$158.02 |
$58,320.95 |
$169,222.03 |
17.92 / 215 mos. |
|
4 |
$632.07 |
$210.69 |
$66,969.79 |
$160,573.19 |
15.92 / 191 mos. |
|
5 |
$632.07 |
$263.36 |
$73,607.77 |
$153,935.21 |
14.34 / 172 mos. | |
One-time Payment
It may not be possible for you to increase your monthly mortgage payment. Keep in mind that most mortgages will permit you to make additional payments to your principal at anytime. Perhaps, five-years after moving into your home you receive a larger than expected tax return, or an inheritance or a non-taxable cash gift. You could apply this money toward your loan's principal, resulting in significant savings and a shorter loan period.
Example
With a $100,000, 30-year, 6.5% fixed interest rate mortgage loan, the borrower will pay a total of $227,542.98 to pay back the loan in 30 years. That equals $127,542.98 in interest payments.
If the same borrower makes a one-time $5,000 payment the first day of year 6, he/she will pay a total of $204,710.75 and pay off the loan in 27 years (324 months). That's a savings of $22,832.23 in interest.
Advice
Although it may seem like a good idea to pay off your mortgage loan quicker--and it very well could be--the better use of extra household funds is to pay off consumer debt that generates non-tax deductible interest. Paying off credit cards and personal loans will generate more savings than using those same funds to pay down your mortgage loan. A good financial planner or accountant can demonstrate exactly what the benefit will be.
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