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AIBU?

to want to make mortgage overpayments

94 replies

Nickpan · 06/03/2019 11:58

or AIBU to myself to confess to not understanding any of it?

OP posts:
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BatsAreCool · 07/03/2019 06:06

As a PP mentioned our IFA is confident that he can on average get a return significantly better than current interest rates (around 3% even after fees and tax on a low risk income generating investment, more comes with more risk).

I hope he followed that up with it's not guaranteed no matter how confident they are. I invest with an IFA but all investments come with risk and therefore it depends on whether you are happy to have little to show for your investments as we know markets crash or stagnate for long periods of time. Yes it can pay off but no guarantees.

Other people may have a low level of financial ability to handle risk so it has to go on an individual basis. A good IFA would assess whether you have the financial capability to handle risk as well as your appetite.

We decided that we wanted no risk until we payed off the mortgage as investments are not guaranteed but your mortgage debt will go down with overpayments. Paying off our mortgage means we can now handle high risk investments because redundancy and illnesses would not have as much of an impact on us if that was to happen as our only debt has gone.

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Uggywuggy · 07/03/2019 06:17

I always overpay and sometimes put chunks across on top of that. I’ve cut years off my mortgage, so will end up paying significantly less interest overall.

Go for it!

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BlitheringIdiots · 07/03/2019 06:18

We overpay by a third of the mortgage payment and have chosen to reduce the term.

We set up a SO to our mortgage account monthly. The sooner they get the money the sooner you save interest

Don't wait til end of year to do it - will get less interest in a savings account than the benefit of the interest you are saving.

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MissedTheBoatAgain · 07/03/2019 06:37

At low interest rates there may not be a lot of advantage to paying off mortgages early. However, it is certainly a good feeling to know that you no longer have a mortgage.

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Iruka · 07/03/2019 06:43

Having some fun money is great, nothing wrong with holidays (and cars I suppose, although I am not bothered). But not by going into further debt by remortgaging, that's just stupid.
If you can afford it then saving up a buffer of a few months wages is a good idea, in case you can't work or lose your job. Clear any higher interest debts first, then put it into your mortgage.
And put a little bit aside for fun as well. No point being debt free and miserable.
All this is dependent on being able to afford it obviously, so many people living month to month

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MissedTheBoatAgain · 07/03/2019 06:45

so many people living month to month

day to day for some too

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kirsty75005 · 07/03/2019 07:01

When you're young ?

I'd say that for a bunch of reasons it's easier to enjoy life with relatively little spending money when you're young than when you're older.

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AnneEyhtMeyer · 07/03/2019 07:02

We overpaid as and when we could, sometimes with regular monthly overpayments and sometimes with lump sums.

We paid off the mortgage a few months ago in 12 years 7 months rather than the original 25 year term. The relief and sense of comfort is huge and we have saved tens of thousands of pounds in interest.

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MaybeitsMaybelline · 07/03/2019 07:16

We overpaid, cleared the mortgage seven years early.

I did it by rounding up the payment to the nearest 100, also whenever I got a small inflation rated pay rise adding this to the payment. Finally whenever a mortgage deal came to an end I negotiated another deal but over a slightly shorter term.

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BlitheringIdiots · 07/03/2019 07:18

If have spare cash then low interest rates is exactly the time to overpay once all other debt with interest is cleared. Not getting as much interest on small savings amount as would save on overpaying larger mortgage interest, albeit still a low rate

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TheSquashyHatOfMrGnosspelius · 07/03/2019 07:27

Pay off debts.

Keep a buffer of money with instant access so you could buy a boiler or a cheap car or a flight to Acapulco in an emergency.

Anything left over then goes on overpayments.

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scaryteacher · 07/03/2019 07:47

We are overpaying substantially as we want the mortgage gone by this November instead of in another 2 years as dh wants to retire early.

Being mortgage free makes that achievable.

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BiddyPop · 07/03/2019 08:48

We overpaid - as interest rates fell, we kept the payment the same. It knocked us from a 25 year mortgage to paying it off in 17 years ( finishes next year).

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Adikbfeayujvxeuhr · 07/03/2019 17:28

We overpay as much as possible but I actively chose to have the effect be to reduce ongoing monthly payments rather than shorten the term. The term will end when we retire anyway so that will be fine.

The scenario I wanted to avoid was: what if you choose to reduce the term but keep payment obligations the same, then when you still have 5 years to go, something happens to scupper your income and you still have a fairly hefty minimum mortgage payment to make? Whereas having chosen to keep the term the same but reduce monthly payments, in the same situation the minimum mortgage payment might only be a couple of hundred quid and much more manageable.

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DroningOn · 07/03/2019 17:31

Overpayment in the early years makes a huge difference to the length of mortgage.

Lots of online calculators that illustrate the benefits.

We've been paying more off with a view to being mortgage free in time for kids starting college/uni/adult life.

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StrongerThanIThought76 · 07/03/2019 18:59

I borrowed £80k over 30 years, £300 monthly payment.

If I overpay by £150 each month I can reduce my term to 18 years. I pay by standing order. I choose to keep the term as it is for now in case I need to drop to the minimum payment.

No brainer.

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BlitheringIdiots · 07/03/2019 19:13

We've kept the DD the same but set up a SO for overpayments. That way we can suspend it or reduce it if need to for a few months.

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HollyBollyBooBoo · 07/03/2019 21:03

@TheSquashyHatOfMrGnosspelius

A flight to Acapulco...brilliantSmile

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RainbowMum11 · 07/03/2019 21:15

I would over pay (& did and have been mortgage free for a few years now) , however it depends if you have other debts which may have a higher interest rates which you would be better paying off first.

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