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mortage overpayments?

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    mortage overpayments?

    wondering what people thoughts are on overpaying on mortages at this point in time.

    my current situation is i'm 3month into a 6 months contract, 50-50 on an extension, have abt 15k warchest at the moment, all things being equal this will be 30k at the end of current contract

    have the option to overpay on mortage at the end of the month, currently paying £700 p/m, if i overpay by about 10k it would reduce my payments to about £630 ish, have no major other debts not planning on splashing out on new car or anything

    would like to do it, but just wondering whether it would be sensible in the short term given the state of the market



    sorry if this is meant to be in accounting and legal but question kinda spans the market at the mo so stuck it in here

    #2
    Originally posted by filthy1980 View Post
    wondering what people thoughts are on overpaying on mortages at this point in time.

    my current situation is i'm 3month into a 6 months contract, 50-50 on an extension, have abt 15k warchest at the moment, all things being equal this will be 30k at the end of current contract

    have the option to overpay on mortage at the end of the month, currently paying £700 p/m, if i overpay by about 10k it would reduce my payments to about £630 ish, have no major other debts not planning on splashing out on new car or anything

    would like to do it, but just wondering whether it would be sensible in the short term given the state of the market



    sorry if this is meant to be in accounting and legal but question kinda spans the market at the mo so stuck it in here
    It depends how long that £30k will sustain you for. If £20k will leave you OK for 6 months, then I'd pay the £10k off and have done with it.

    We bought at the height of the market, and have put a couple of chunks in to stop us from losing all of the equity % in the house. At the least, it'll do that for you, and if things pick up again, you'll be in a handsome position moving forwards - either paying quite a low amount, or by having enough equity in the house to step up the ladder....something which is a long way off for me right now!

    HTH
    "Being a permy is like being married, when there's no more sex on the cards....and she's got fat."
    SlimRick

    Can't argue with that

    Comment


      #3
      What are the short and long term predictions for interest rates?
      What effect will those have on your mortgage repayments?

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by oversteer View Post
        What are the short and long term predictions for interest rates?
        What effect will those have on your mortgage repayments?
        Stable. Up. And Up. (BTW, mortgage rates have long since become disconnected from BoE IRs. Still, think "up".)
        nomadd liked this post

        Comment


          #5
          I dont know about anyone else but if it was me deciding on this, I would sod the overpayments and keep the warchest big and healthy for the time being. Do the overpayment bit when the economy and markets are looking healthier, or if your skills are in such high demand you wont have a problem finding your next contract.

          Comment


            #6
            Do a google for a mortgage overpayment calculator, a little now makes a huge difference at the end even when rates are low. It is quite surprising what 100 quid extra a month can do. Give it a go and see.

            A lot of people are giving up on pensions and overpaying mortgate so they are free of debt when they retire instead of gambling on a crap return from the pension.

            Can you draw down if you over pay? If so double bonus.

            I would say fill your boots as soon as possible. Even if the rates are low and may not seem worth it now you will be quids in when they start going up again. Once they are up it is too late.
            'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

            Comment


              #7
              thanks for the opinion fellas

              i think overpaying now would save me around 22k over the course of the mortgage, normally i'd jump at overpaying

              but the current state of the market has got me thinking,

              might just pay of a 5% this year rather then the 10% i can do

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by filthy1980 View Post
                have the option to overpay on mortage at the end of the month
                Don't mess about with these namby pamby sort of flexible ones where you over pay it at certain times or you can't take back the money you over pay.
                Get yourself a proper flexible mortgage where you can treat it as a big overdraft and over/under pay as much as you like.
                Free advice and opinions - refunds are available if you are not 100% satisfied.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Why not get an offset mortgage, that way you get the benefit of reducing your mortgage but the option to access the funds if you need to.
                  "The budget should be balanced, the Treasury should be refilled, public debt should be reduced, the arrogance of officialdom should be tempered and controlled, and the assistance to foreign lands should be curtailed lest Rome become bankrupt. People must again learn to work, instead of living on public assistance." Cicero

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Offset mortgage like the last poster said sounds the best - don't let the warchest get too low...its still tough out there

                    Comment

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