Making Your Extra Mortgage Payments Count
Home owners
with a mortgage usually want to reduce their interest cost
by paying down the loan balance as fast as possible. This
article is about what borrowers can and cannot do on their
own. Next week I look at various schemes that claim to make
the task easier.
Is There Any Benefit In Making Scheduled Payments Before the
Due Date? No. One of the
many readers who have asked me this question told me that
she was in the habit of making payments 6 months early! She
was crestfallen to learn that this practice did not reduce
her interest cost at all.
On a standard
mortgage, interest accrues monthly, and is calculated by
multiplying one-twelfth of the annual interest rate times
the loan balance at
the end of the preceding month. For example, if the
loan balance is $100,000 and the interest rate is 6%, the
interest due is .06/12 x 100,000, or $500.
The borrower owes $500 regardless of when the payment
is made or how many days there are in the month,. If the
payment is late by more than the 10 or 15 day “grace
period,” there is an additional late fee. But there is no
rebate for paying early.
Simple
interest mortgages, on which interest accrues daily, are an
exception. On these mortgages, every day of delay in making
the payment increases the interest cost, and paying early
does reduce the borrower’s interest bill. Simple interest
mortgages used to be fairly common, but I am not aware of
any being offered today.
Do Extra Payments Save More Interest
When Made In Some Months?
No,
the only valid rule is that the sooner you make the payment,
the more interest you will save.
An idea that
keeps popping up in my mailbox is that the best month in
which to make extra payments to principal is January. It is
certainly true that a January payment saves more interest
than one made in the succeeding February, but it saves less
than one made the preceding December.
Is There a Best Time Within the Month
to Make an Extra Payment to Principal?
Yes, the best time within the month to make an extra payment
is the last day on which the lender will credit you for the
current month, rather than deferring credit until the
following month. If it is the 15th, for example,
an extra payment made within the first 15 days of January
will reduce your balance that month and the interest due in
February. Payments made the 16th or later will
not be credited until February, and the interest deduction
will be deferred until March.
There is no
universal lender practice in crediting extra payments. Some
lenders will credit payments received anytime during the
month while others are much more restrictive. In most cases,
extra payments sent in with the scheduled payment will be
credited the same month, but it is a good idea to ask your
lender what their rule is.
Is There a Best Way In Which to Make an
Extra Payment? No, you can
use the same payment method that you use to make your
scheduled payment. Just bear in mind that the relevant date
is when the payment is credited by the lender, not the date
when you sent it.
A practice you
should avoid is to make the extra payment an exact multiple
of your scheduled payment. If that payment is $610.43, for
example, don’t make a payment of $1220.86 because then the
lender will probably interpret the additional amount as an
advance of your scheduled payment and hold it, rather than
pay down your balance.
Is There a Best Way to Allocate Extra
Payments When a Borrower Has Two Mortgages on the Same
Property? Yes, the general
rule is to pay down the second mortgage first. Not only will
the second have a higher rate, but second mortgages also can
make life more complicated for borrowers looking to
refinance or having payment difficulties.
The possible
exception is a HELOC second, which might well carry a lower
rate than the first mortgage, though it has high potential
for future rate increases. The borrower who directs extra
payments to a HELOC that has not yet reached the stage of
mandatory repayment increases his credit line by the amount
of the extra payment. This could be a desirable outcome for
the borrower.
Is There a Best Way to Allocate Extra
Payments When a Borrower-Investor Has Mortgages on Several
Properties? Yes, the general
rule is that you save the most by paying down the mortgage
with the highest interest rate first. One possible exception
is where the mortgage that does not have the higher current
rate is exposed to the most interest rate risk. For example,
a borrower with a 4.5% fixed-rate mortgage and a 4%
adjustable-rate mortgage, both in the early stages of their
lives, might well elect to pay down
the adjustable-rate mortgage because of the
possibility that at some future time its rate could go as
high as 9%.
Another
possible exception would be where the lower-rate mortgage
has a greater potential for a profitable refinance. For
example, a 6% mortgage has a loan balance that is 89% of
property value while a 5.75% mortgage is at 81%. If the
extra payment directed to the lower-rate mortgage reduces
the balance to 80%, no mortgage insurance would be required
to refinance it.
A third
possible exception is where the borrower-investor has so
many mortgages that lenders refuse to finance any more
acquisitions. Many lenders have a limit of 10. In that
situation, the borrower looking toward further expansion
wants a complete payoff ASAP and will concentrate all extra
payments to the mortgage with the smallest balance.
