The
Only Real Ways to Pay Off a Mortgage Early
The day you move into your new house is always a happy
one. Everything is great and you now have your own abode.
The feeling just couldn't be better. Then, an inevitable
thought crosses your mind. You have 30 years left to pay
on your mortgage. Wow! Thirty long years of making monthly
payments, now there's a reality check!
No one likes to be saddled with a long-term debt such
as a 30-year mortgage. Because of this many ways have
been thought up where people can pay off their mortgages
well ahead of schedule.
These methods sometimes promise you'll be paid off in
7 years, some 10 years, 15 years and some incredibly promise
you will pay off your mortgage 26 years ahead of schedule.
I'm sorry, but now I must hit you with sobering thought
number 2: there are only two ways to pay off your mortgage
early!
By the end of this article you will find out what these
two ways are, but first let's talk about some of the not
so real ways.
Accelerator mortgage
With an accelerator mortgage, you pay every cent you make
into a mortgage account and at the end of the month your
mortgage payment is taken out of the account. Proponents
of the accelerator mortgage say it works because this
account you pay into pays interest and that compounding
interest negates the interest you are paying on the mortgage.
However, when the agent sets up your accelerator account,
he/she asks you how much you want to leave in your savings
each month to be paid toward the mortgage. You will even
be egged on. They will ask, "$250, $500, $1,000?"
$1,000! Heck, if you paid that much toward your mortgage
each month, you would pay off any mortgage way ahead of
schedule!
If you were to say, "well, nothing. I don't have
anything left after groceries and other expenses."
They won't want to give you the mortgage because the compounding
interest in this mortgage account means very, very little.
The heart of the accelerator plan is you pay extra principal
in the way of savings left in your account each month.
Biweekly, Bimonthly and Weekly Plans
With the biweekly plan you are led to believe making two
payments a month, which together equal the same amount
you have been, paying monthly, will take 7 years off the
time it takes to pay off the mortgage.
In reality, with a biweekly plan you make 26 half payments
or 13 monthly payments each year instead of 12 so, of
course, you will pay off your mortgage a lot sooner. The
backbone of this plan is you are led to believe you will
not be paying more money each month, but the fact there
is more than 4 weeks in a month is the real reason it
works. Oh, and by the way, for getting fooled like this
you get the pleasure of paying about $1,000 upfront in
fees to convert to the biweekly plan!
There is no such thing as a bimonthly plan. It is just
a Biweekly plan improperly titled. Weekly plans are the
same as biweekly plans cut up into smaller payments, but
the same arithmetic applies.
The only two ways
The conclusion is there are only two ways to pay off a
mortgage ahead of time. One is to pay more principal each
month. For instance, the payment on a 30-year mortgage
for $200,000 at 6.25% is $1,231. However, if you pay an
extra $270 each month, you will pay off the mortgage in
full, 11 years ahead of schedule and you will save over
$100,000!
The only other option you may be able to get that will
help you pay your mortgage earlier is to get a lower interest
rate and continue to make the same monthly payment. In
the example above, if you were able to refinance at 5.50%
but you continued to pay $1,231 monthly, you would have
that mortgage paid in full in 25 years, instead of 30
years.
Still, paying $1,231 monthly is the same as making additional
payments toward principal because the scheduled monthly
payment for $200,000 at 5.50% is $1,135. So, here is the
final conclusion; you can try to fool math, but it is
just as futile as trying to fool Mother Nature. You can't
do it! To get your mortgage paid ahead of time, you have
to make principal payments ahead of time one way or another.
That is all there is to it!
About the Author
Ed Lathrop is a successful real estate investor. He has
developed EzCalculator, a mortgage calculator that shows
you how to save $100,000 on your mortgage. Come visit this
free site at free financial
calculator . Also, find out how to get and use your
amortization table to make big money at amortization
schedules free. These sites are not owned by any lender,
so no one will harass you for visiting! |