Mortgage Prepayment Made Easy: Own Your Home in Half the Time
Published on - February 12th, 2008 (Modified on - March 8th, 2012) (by J.D. Roth) Because I recently eliminated all of my non-mortgage debt, I have a significant positive cash flow. The $1,000 per month I was putting toward debt can now be used for investing. I’m making maximum contributions to my Roth IRA, of course, but that still leaves several hundred dollars each month available for other purposes. This has forced me to evaluate my financial goals.
Mortgage prepayment options
For the past year, Kris and I have discussed making accelerated payments on our mortgage. I’ve written about this choice several times at Get Rich Slowly, and it seems clear that mathematically it makes more sense to invest the money. However, it’s also clear that eliminating a mortgage offers a tremendous psychological boost. I’ve never heard anyone say they regret owning their home outright.
I’ve researched a variety of mortgage acceleration schemes:
- Refinancing from a 30-year to a 15-year mortgage is appealing, but the interest rate drop (from 6.25%) isn’t enough to make this worthwhile.
- I could sign up for my bank’s bi-weekly payment program, but I don’t like the enrollment fee, and I don’t like the increase in paperwork.
- We could make an extra payment every year, or pay an extra $100 per month. But I feel like we could do more.
Ultimately, we decided to use the method described by Charles Givens in his 1988 best-seller Wealth Without Risk:
You can pay off your 30-year mortgage in half the time without refinancing by making extra principal payments. On the first of the month when you write your regular mortgage check, write a second check for the “principal only” portion of the next month’s payment.
You can also use a prepayment calculator to figure out additional scenarios.
[Article Continued Below..]
Wealth without risk
For most of homeowners, the principal portion of a mortgage payment is quite small. For example, our February mortgage bill was $1681.79. Of this, $1119.16 was designated for interest, $295.19 for escrow (taxes and insurance), but only $267.44 for principal.
Using Givens’ plan, if I include an extra $267.44 with my payment, I’ll also knock off the next month’s payment from my mortgage. That $267.44 accomplishes the same thing $1681.79 usually does, but at 16% of the normal monthly cost. That’s a bargain.
The advantages this method are:
- It has a sliding degree of difficulty. At first, the extra principal payments are lower. But as we pay down the mortgage, these extra payments increase. We have time to “grow into” these increased payments.
- It’s easy for us to back out. If we decide our money is better used elsewhere, we can simply stop making extra principal payments.
- Every time we make a payment, we’re essentially making two payments, cutting the term of our mortgage in half.
After discussing the pros and cons, Kris and I have agreed to follow a modified version of Givens’ plan. To make things simple, we’re using round numbers. During 2008, for example, we’re going to pay $2,000 toward our mortgage each month, which gives us an additional $318.21 against the principal.

Every January, we’ll adjust how much extra we’re paying. If our budget gets too tight, we can cut back at any time.
The drawbacks
To be fair, Givens doesn’t recommend this method for low-interest mortgages like ours. He clearly states, “Never pay off low interest mortgages — those under 9%. Instead, use the extra money in a better investment.” He wouldn’t advocate using this method on a 6.25% mortgage.
The March 2008 issue of Consumer Reports has a brief exploration of this topic. Their conclusion?
Many people find peace of mind in paying off their mortgages and owning their homes outright, especially as they approach retirement. That can make an investment in your mortgage a worthy choice, psychologically if not financially.
Still, the bottom line, according to our Money Lab, is this: Although there are exceptions, chances are you’ll be better off putting extra money into a good mutual fund, not into prepaying your mortgage.
“Did you see this article?” Kris asked me, after she finished reading it.
“Yes,” I said. “What do you think?”
“I don’t care” she said. “I want to do both. I want to invest and prepay the mortgage.”
“So do I,” I said.
Financial freedom
If we have a substantial emergency fund, if we’re fully-funding our retirement plans, and if we’re saving for other goals, I believe that paying down the mortgage makes sense for us. We understand that we’re sacrificing some theoretical (and probable) future investment returns, but we’re also working to create a financial situation that’s easier for us to maintain in the long run.
If we have no mortgage, that’s $1400 less each month that we have to pay in expenses (we’ll still need to pay taxes and insurance). Since we split the payment, that’s $700 less per month that I have to pay. Without a mortgage, my fixed expenses would be about $600/month. My total expenses would be about $950/month. This would provide tremendous freedom, granting me an opportunity to try things that I might not otherwise be able to do.
Another form of diversification
Every investment book I’ve read says that a smart investor diversifies his portfolio, putting some of his money into each of several different types of investments. I view prepaying the mortgage as diversification. Sure, the stock market will probably beat the 6.25% I’ll earn by doing this, but it’s guaranteed money. To me, it’s better to put my money into my mortgage than into bonds, certificate of deposit or a high-yield savings account. Especially if we’re entering a recession.
This article is about Choices, House and Home, Money Hacks, Planning
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Great writeup, thanks! Your blog is a constant inspiration
Maybe it’s different over here (I’m in the UK), but I think I’d be hard pressed to get an investment that beats mortgage overpayments.
My mortgage rate is 6%. There’s no tax relief on any of the payment. A (probably optimistic) fund/investment is going to return 10%. After 50% tax (40% income tax, roughly 10% national insurance), that’s taken down to 5%. And it’s by no means guaranteed!
So, try and pay off the £150k that’s got 6% cost for 25 years, quicker, or invest now and enjoy compound growth? Tricky.
As it goes, I follow a similar approach as you. I split my extra income 50/50 into mortgage overpayments and investment vehicles. My mortgage is currently winning, with my ‘investment’ having lost 20% of its value in the last 12 months! Oh well. In for the long haul, I guess!
And (again, maybe UK only) my mortgage is nice and flexible. I can make any overpayments I like (well, upto 10% of the balance a year), whenever I like, and the interest is recalculated daily. It can then work as a cash reserve if we ever fall on hard times – you can take payment holidays or underpayments upto the amount you’ve ever made overpayments.
When you take both of these into account, it seems silly not to put at least something extra into the mortgage principle! In fact, I’m going to call my bank now and chuck some more across!
Thanks!
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[...] JD’s post on Get Rich Slowly yesterday, and the comments on it inspired this post. [...]
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I’m not sure I fully understand what you are doing. Is there any difference between a.) specifically earmarking a certain amount for next month’s principle and b.) just paying an additional amount each month? Is there some extra benefit in identifying the extra payment as being for the next month’s principle? I thought it was automatically applied to the principle anyway. Love your blog and what you are doing. You are certainly passionate about it, which comes through. –John
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@Tim (#95): The tax on long-term capital gains is in lieu of, not in addition to, ordinary income tax.
@PaulJ (#91): You’re right to point out that the mortgage interest is tax-deductible; however, you forget to account for the tax that has to be paid on any interest or dividend income from an alternate investment. Also, if you wouldn’t otherwise itemize, the mortgage interest deduction is only valuable to the extent it exceeds the standard deduction.
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Many great comments here. This subject always creates excellent dialogue.
I personally prefer to pay the mortage n(principal) off early. The level of comfort in not having an additional $1,000 per month outlay can not be assuaged by a potential investment gain.
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When I paid off my house, it was such a freeing and comforting feeling. Every day I feel smart, happy and relaxed. I called my mortgage company and asked them to deduct a certain amount automatically and apply it to the principal. If I ever needed that money in the future, I could stop that set-up with a phone call, but I never did.
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“Also, paying off your mortgage is not really a guaranteed return (as others have pointed out here). Contrary to public opinion, housing prices can and do fall (stay tuned in the US economy to see just how far they can fall.) If you pay extra principal off on your mortgage and your house falls in value by the amount of the principal repayment, you have just lost 100% of your money.”
No, your math is wrong. Your house is going to go up or down in value regardless of how fast you pay off the mortgage. Whether your house value rises or falls, you still owe the remainder of loan. Any gain or loss is only locked in when you sell.
If you pre-pay $10,000 on your mortgage and the house goes down by $10,000, then yes you have “lost” the amount you pre-paid. But if you don’t pre-pay the $10,000 your house is still going to go down and you’re down $10,000 in equity. The change in value subracts $10,000 from your net worth whether you’ve prepaid the mortgage, invested it in stocks or just frittered it away on a new car.
The reason paying off debt is a guaranteed return is that money you pay off now is money you don’t have to pay off later (with interest). You have to pay the whole loan off eventually, one way or another.
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Watch where the prepayment goes. I was making the occasional extra payment on my mortgage. The mortgage company conveniently applied those extra funds to the escrow account associated to the mortgage. Then issued me a “Rebate” check at the end of the year for the “surplus” money I contributed toward the escrow account.
Make sure that they are putting the money where you want.
I did earn a hefty $6 or so in Escrow Account Interest!
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I live in Canada too and for my wife and I paying off our mortgage makes the most sense for several reasons:
1) We sold our previous house three years ago for about 120,000 more than I paid for it in 2001. Since we had paid down the mortgage as much as we could, we had a large down payment to put towards a large, better located house closer to my work (and we save at least $100/month on fuel savings since I don’t have to drive to work). Had we not paid down the mortgage as much as we did, the bank likely would not have given us the much larger mortgage we needed. And to take money out of our investments (even if used to purchase another home) would have had us paying large amounts of tax on that amount.
2) We have a Home Equity Line of Credit on the current house. How this works is that with a minimum 25% downpayment (which we had, again because we maximized our payments on the previous house’s LOC) you basically have a conventional Line of Credit, ours being at the prime interest rate here in Canada. This means that we only have to pay the interest (currently around $1200) on the remaining balance. Our interest therefore lowers the more we reduce our balance. And to reduce our balance we simply transfer money into the account from our chequing account – there is no minimum or maximum monthly or yearly amount we need to pay down and no fees associated with paying. So if one month we can’t pay down the balance or decide to use the money to update something in the house or go on a holiday, we simply don’t pay. And if one month extra money comes in we usually put at least part of it towards the balance, depending on how much extra there is. But since the rate is at prime our interest payment does fluctuate a bit (but right now the rate has been steady at 6.25%) – we were laughing a few years ago when the rate dropped to a little over 3%, we were paying just a few hundred dollars during that time which left more money for a trip overseas we had been planning.
3) This Line of Credit also allows us in an emergency (ie. roof needs replacing on the house, car repairs) to take money out of the LOC. But it does of course take discipline as we are in full control over whether the balance gets paid off or not – we could actually decide not to, but as other comments have said, you are stuck with a monthly bill that you have to pay each month, which we don’t like having.
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We just sold our home in the worst market in the country for us to start over with a more satisfying job. We have been paying down our mortgage for about 5 years with 1 or 2 extra payments per year. Without the extra payments we would have had to come to the table with about $10,000 more dollars and we already have to come up with a boat load at closing. We may have actually paid 1/2 of that amount in extra principal payments. I may never want a mortgage again because of this experience, but I definitely would say paying down the house is the best option in case you run into the same situation as us… Luckily we have a fully funded emergency fund to the emergency fund, so we are still in good shape.
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I agree whole-heartedly with Kurt (post #84).
J.D. – I’m assuming your home is worth ~$280k – based on 80 LTV on the original balance of $225k.
If you continue to pay an extra $318.21 per month towards principal (assuming any increases just cover escrow increases, which are at the rate of inflation), you’ll pay off your mortgage in 23.5 years. Assuming 3% average annual appreciation over those years, your home will be worth $565k.
Also, as Kurt noted, appreciation hardly guaranteed. It may be positive long-term, but it has historically not been much higher than the rate of inflation. Note that if prices also increase an average of 3% per year, your house will have not appreciated in real terms (i.e. you have a 0% real rate of return).
Assuming you currently have no funds invested and 8% annual portfolio return, you would have to save $680 *each month* for those 23.5 years in order to have $565k in your investment accounts. That would leave you split 50/50 between your house and all your other investments.
I know I have made a lot of assumptions but I hope the analysis is still accurate. I would appreciate any corrections. The end result is that you will have a large, illiquid asset that will be the majority of your net worth.
Regarding Givens’ “Wealth Without Risk”, I would be wary because Givens is one of John T. Reed’s ‘not recommended’ gurus. Regarding the book’s title, there is always opportunity risk – not all of which is quantitative by the way.
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What do you think of mortgage acceleration program’s like United First Financial’s, where you pay your mortgage out of a HELOC? It all sounds good and easy, but, of course, you have to pay $3,500 for the software. Also our mortgage is at a really low rate, 6%, which you say not even to bother paying off.
–
United First Financial
http://www.u1stfinancial.net/debtfreestrategy
Any advice would be appreciated.
Thanks!
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Leanne,
I think $3,500 is a lot to pay for something you can do yourself. I investigated the program out of curiosity and was not impressed at all.
Very simply, they put all your positive cash flow each month toward your mortgage (which requires making a budget). If you currently have negative cash flow, they’ll try to help you consolidate your debt in order to generate positive cash flow.
The results aren’t materially different from making a budget yourself and putting all your spare cash towards your mortgage, except you save $3,500. The software itself doesn’t add much value.
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Can you explain to me exactly how this is different from just overpaying a certain amount each month? Is the point that it increases as the principal part of the mortgage increases? Or is there some magic to specifying that the extra is paid against the principal in particular? Thanks!
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Is there a calculator online that can figure out how much time you’re shaving off the end of the mortgage by making extra principal payments? I’m not sending in a full month of principal at this time since I’m still paying down credit cards, but I do round up my mortgage payment to the next hundred dollars, so I’m sending in an extra $25-30 per month. I’d be curious to see how much this is helping.
Thanks for another interesting post!
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Great Post
I just bought house and I am thinking of paying 100$ more each month.
I was just wondering what happens to people that prepay their morgage and then after 1-2 years they have to file bankruptcy? Wouldn’t that be then waist of money?
Or what about people that have foreclosure? (I bought foreclosure house)
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About four years ago, I had 22 years left on a 30-year mortgage. My timing was more luck than foresight, but I was able to refinance to a 15-year loan with an interest rate so much lower that my payment stayed the same. Anyway, I send an extra $1000 with each payment and my lender applies it to principal. With the fast equity build of a 15-year loan and the extra payment each month, my mortgage balance is dropping very quickly. I plan to write a check to pay off the remaining balance before the end of this year.
I’m a financial advisor and I believe one should not view their home as an investment. I could very easily have invested this extra money, but the peace of mind gained from knowing that I will be completely debt-free soon is the return I want from the cash outlay. I’m 64 and will probably never fully retire, but not having a large mortgage payment every month will allow me to slow down a little over the next few years!
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[...] Get Rich Slowly talks about Mortgage Prepayment Made Easy: Own Your Home in Half the Time. [...]
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I am priced out of the housing market. And I agree with adfecto so it all works out. Thank you govenmental sponsered low income housing for depressing local rents.
Rent $425 month.
Just property taxes $200 month.
If you find a house for ~$225 tell me
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[...] -Own Your Home in Half the Time Excellent post from finance blogger J.D. Roth on how to pay back your mortgage in half the time it would normally take you. [...]
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Remember, invest the money you were planning to use to pay down your mortgage and you can use that invested money in the future to pay off your mortgage and have much more after that
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[...] Get Rich Slowly makes mortgage prepayment easy. [...]
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I have been reading and I am not sure which would be the best option of paying off a 30 year mortgage. Should I do the bi-weekly,save extra principal payments and pay the balloon payment at the end of the year or just make the one extra mortgage payment a year, which is the best option?
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JD – PLEASE READ – This is kind of important.
From your post it is prety clear that your mortgage holder is applying the extra payment immediately against your principal – but I have found that may not be the norm.
In my own forays with prepaying mortgages I have found a disturbing practice.
Unless you specifically tell the bank to apply your the amount in excess of your payment due – they will not apply it to your account immediately. They will wait until the excess amount they have on their books is enough to equal one of your “regular payments” and then apply that as a payment. So in the meantime your payment isn’t earning you interest and it isn’t stopping the interest on that portion of your loan!
I’ve also found this is the same way that some of the “pay bi-weekly” plans from the banks work. Specifically Wells Fargo. Their bi-weekly payment plan collects a payment every two weeks, but it only pays them against the loan every four weeks (when it reaches the point of being a “full payment”. So essentially they are floating half the value of your payment in their favor! The best option for us as consumers would be for that money to pay down our loan as it is collected.
I had the same experience with Washington Mutual – If I made an extra payment by electronincally transferring funds to pay down the loan, they wouldn’t pay it against the loan until a “full payment” amount was reached – unless I specifically talked to them on the phone each time I made a payment, or if I went into the branch and made that request and made my payment in person.
I don’t want to spend my time visiting the branch each month or waiting on hold on the phone and having to explain the situation over and over again.
The bottom line is – when you think you are making extra payments or biweekly payments – you may not be getting as much benefit as you think you are! Check the details of any agreement if it is a biweekly program, or if making extra payments on your own, find out when you bank is crediting them against your loan!
The value may seem small, but when you take all the compunding into consideration it makes a big deal over the life of the loan.
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Hi there,
I just read this article and am wondering if you could use the same technique to pay off an automobile loan. Currently my husband and I have no credit card debt. Just rent, utilities and car payments. It would be awesome to not have those payments. Our loan rates are in the 5% range, but I’m thinking we could have them paid off very quickly instead of 3-4 years by following a similar method. Advice or feedback?
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[...] February 12th: Mortgage prepayment made easy: Own your home in half the time [...]
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Mathematically the best and easiest option for paying down a mortgage is to make one principal payment in January of every year in the same dollar amount as your regular monthly payment. If your regular monthly principal, interest and escrow payment is $450 then make a principal only payment of $450. It is the best system for paying down a mortgage because you only have to do it once every year and the benefits are equal to or greater than any other pay down system
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#123 and others re: best way and biweekly
If you have the option of a free biweekly payment plan, that’s attractive. First of all, you don’t ‘write checks’ every two weeks. The payments are deducted from your checking account electronically. As others said, they’re rarely applied when withdrawn – usually after two are combined. The interest savings equates to about seven years of mortgage payments!
Another way to see similar results is to divide your monthly payment by 12, then ADD that amount to each month’s full payment. Mark the excess “principal only.” This adds up to a full extra payment per year – all applied to principal, which is the same thing biweekly accomplishes.
Therefore, the savings is approximately seven years either way. One method includes forced discipline for a fee. The other does not.
Lin
author of Let Your Mortgage Make You Rich
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My payment plan for cutting my mortgage down from 30 to 18 years is to increase my current mortgage payment by the same COLA/raise I get from my job each year. For instance, this year I received a 6% raise. So I bumped my mortgage payment by 6%. This way I’m paying the same relative amount of money to my mortgage that I always have been.
I realize this may not work for those who don’t receive annual pay increases like this. But it’s been a nice way to cut my mortgage from 30 to 18 years without feeling a pinch (assuming 3% annual increases in pay, which should keep up with inflation).
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I’ve been paying my sister’s mortgage (7%) $682/month. Long story short, her husband serving a prison term, no divorce desired by both parties, declared bankruptcy and needs a roof over the heads of sis and her two kids.
We have wanted to refinance for a long time but the terms are always starting a new 15 or 30 year mortgage, high closing costs and not much savings monthly.
I inquired about just putting down $25K to $30K on the current balance. Finally I got the answer I needed – it’s called recasting –and it would bring our balance down to a figure that would then be a monthly mortgage amount of $440. This is what I’m looking for and am able to do it.
Decision will be made by end of 2008. I can pay myself back a lot quicker than waiting 15-30 years to pay a mortgage.
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Hi Judy,
That sounds great. It sounds like a perfectly logical solution – who knew a lender would go for it ?
Can you share a little more about the specifics? For example, what is the fee (paperwork, etc) to do this, and are you working with the original loan term or a new one?
Lin
http://www.letyourmortgagemakeyourich.com
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I would like to know what IRA, Mutual Fund, Stock or other investment vehicle will guarantee me a return of $320,000 in 6-8 years without me changing my current lifestyle or making any more money? That is the interest I am in the process of saving as compared to a standard 30 year mortgage at 6.25%. Add to this that when we sell our paid-off house for about $500,000 in six years, all that money is coming to my pocket tax free. This is not a psychological boost. Is called commom finacial sense. If something was to happen in the six years, i.e I loose my job or get sick, we have an equity line to draw from. This is a different program than any mentioned above. It is not a bi-weekly payout or a debt roll-down program. I am increasing my home equity faster than anything I have seen. I am doing this wiithout re-financing. It is really good and true. If you are interested in finding out more information, please reply
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llleras,
You’re not saving $320,000 in 6-8 years; that figure is what you would have saved over the entire 30-year mortgage if you had only made the scheduled payment.
The value of your home in 6 years is far from certain… especially in light of the current economic situation. Only capital gains (sale price – purchase price) are taxed, not the entire sale price of $500,000. It is quite possible that you could lose the equity you’re putting into your house by making extra principal payments.
The equity line you mention often costs money to set up and you have to pay interest on the money you borrow. It seems odd you’re pro-HELOC, since you’re touting how much interest you’ll save by paying off your primary mortgage early.
More importantly, you may struggle to find an institution willing to extend you credit via a HEL/HELOC, _especially_ if you have no job or are on short-term disability. This is because the HEL/HELOC is subordinate to the first mortgage, meaning the institution probably wouldn’t be repaid if you were to default on your primary mortgage.
Even if you currently have a HELOC, the issuer may be able to adjust the credit line, change the terms or close it at any time (check the terms and conditions of your HELOC).
Best,
Josh
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You are right, I am saving 320,000 over the 30 years. Or if you look at it another way, I wont have to make interest or principal payments from year 7 through year 30. Looking strictly at the money I begin to save from year 7 on to year 30, is around $553,000 not taking into account inflation of course. The value of my house today, in this economy is $489,000. I seriously doubt that the value of my house will go down so drastically or fluctuate as much as my 401K did in 2000 when it lost 50% of its value. By the way those types of stock market fluctuations are common,but the type of devaluation in house prices we see today are not.
I have barely recuperated from the loses from the stock market in 2000.
In regards to the equity line argument, if you open your heloc and then you loose your job or become disable, you would’nt have to ask for an extension to your credit line, you should have one opened with the maximum credit limit. I don’t think that anyone should wait until they are not able to qualify for a credit line to ask for one. More importantly, and you already mentioned this, nobody will give you a credit line after you lost your job or became disabled.
To the last point about the issuer changing the terms or adjust the credit line is true however for that to happen, the value of my property will have to be less than 120% of the credit limit. Possible but unlikely.
Regards,
llleras
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A lot of American’s contribute to a 401k plan like I do. I agree with several posts that consider the mortgage pay off as “diversification”. My 401k mutual funds actually lost money last year and it includes supposedly excellent funds consisting of primarily large cap and international stocks. So I believe since I’m putting 18% of my income in stocks already, that I’m diversifying by paying off my mortgage at the same time. I’m making bi-annual payments simply because I don’t want to bother sending monthly checks. I just walk into my mortgage bank and use a debit card to make a payment directly toward my principle.
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[...] Rich Slowly reminded us of another interesting way to payoff your mortgage early: pay an extra principal payment each month to get rid of your mortgage in half of the time. Related PostsCommunity In Action: Book Winner and [...]
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Excellent advice. I’ll share this with my wife.
My financial planner gave a good answer which I wrote about on my blog, Cash Flow Today.
But I think your answer of paying the next month’s principal is easy-to-implement advice.
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To payoff a straight/fully amortized mortgage in 1/2 the time and at 1/2 the interest cost, simply send in an extra 10% along with your regular payment and send in a 13th regular payment in addition to the 12 monthly payments once per year-typically around tax time when you get a tax refund or maybe when you get a bonus sometime during the year is a good time and reminder. What’s nice is you are not only paying it off in 1/2 the time you’re also cutting the cost in interest paid by 1/2 as well! Ie: This is great if you qualify for a double digit interest rate, for example, a 10% interest loan using this method you pay 1/2 of that or 5%.
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Has anyone researched the homeowner acccelorator program through GMAC?
It’s available through individual mortgage companies?
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Two comments:
We used to pay a lump sum each month towards our mortgage principal. I have found it easier to break that down into weekly automatic payments. If I need the money elsewhere I can cancel one or two payments.
2nd Every year our escrow amount has been increasing due to tax increases. This has helped alter our ultimate mortgage payoff date to a later date.
Good luck with your mortgage paydown.
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Great analysis and I recently wrote about how extra payments can ensure you pay your mortgage off upto 7 years earlier. Pre-payments are are a great idea and from an investment/security perspective the best thing to do with your spare money.
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[...] the final option we considered was using the Givens Plan outlined in this article at Get Rich Slowly. Under the Givens plan, when you make each monthly payment, you also pay the [...]
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I’m so glad I stumbled across this entry. My highest interest debt is actually my second mortgage–10% of the purchase price at 8% interest. After my credit cards and student loans are paid off (a looong way to go), I would love to tackle this 15-year note and take it out in 8-10 years, instead. This provided a lot of clarity for me. Thanks!
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[...] use the bi-weekly mortgage payment program or some just make extra principal payments along with their monthly payment. Dotti uses and sells a software tool that provides a method to do [...]
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I stopped making my extra mortgage payments after reading this article that gives 10 reasons to carry a mortgage.
http://www.ricedelman.com/cs/education/article?articleId=232&titleParam=10 Great Reasons to Carry a Big, Long Mortgage
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Hi “Bad Example,”
Thanks for the article. The author makes some good points. For example, if you’re carrying credit card debt at 18%, better to pay that off first while your mortgage remains around 5-7%.
If you can use mortgage debt to invest for higher returns, you have another reason to carry a mortgage.
The tax deduction, while something I’ll use as long as it’s available, is the lamest reason ever to buy a home. What you save in taxes will more than be eaten up in repairs, maintenance and rising property taxes.
http://www.thegreatmortgagerevolt.com/mortgage-tax-deduction-lie/
Still, the decision rests on your goals. What are your goals, people?
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Another reason I am hoping to pay off the mortgage early is that my husband and I hope to build a house in 5-6 years. We’ve been in our house for two years already. I hope to be consumer debt-free by June 2011. If my husband and I can begin prepaying the mortgage with the payments that WERE going toward my credit card debt, we’ll build up significant equity in the house by the time we’re ready to build. As the “amount of house” we can build is based on how much we have to pay to build it, the more equity we can earn on the house by the time we build, the better we’ll be when it comes to sell our house and use the profits on the build.
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I am mortgage/ debt free and have a differen’t perspective.
(i did the “buy fix up and sell” game and mortgage prepayment to get here)
The mortgage payment on my house (P&I) was $1600 I paid it off in 7 years with a lump sum from a rental i sold and about $500 extra a month.
Not having a mortgage is like getting a tax free dividend of $1600 per month for the next 23 years.
Use an annuity calculator to figure out how much you would have to invest to reach that!
With the current market mess i an glad i made the “wrong decision” to pay off my mortgage. my stocks are on the way to zero but my debt free status can’t be taken away.
The comment about not having any cash for an emergentcy is technicaly true, but is easily cured by a HELOC (mine is 2 hundred thousand) between my savings and my HELOC that would have to be one hell of an emergency.
One thing that motivated me way back when I started was to do the math. I had to work over 100 hours per month just to pay the interest on my debt. (Figure out the interest you pay and divide it by your hourly rate.) Then try to pretend to your self that slavery doesn’t exist in our country anymore!
Fight the good fight friends. Debt free is freedom.
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My wife and I are in our early 30′s and have paid off ALL our debts, house included.
It’s amazing how much more control over finances you have knowing that you are OUT of debt. At that point, you do NOT want to go back into it.
So, there is an unquantifiable aspect to a paid off house. It teaches you to tighten your spending, even though you could splurge.
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If you want to make the argument of investing instead of paying off your house. I have to ask if you would borrow money agianst your house to invest? That is basically what you are doing.
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