What is the right kind of mortgage for you ?
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Title: What is the right kind of mortgage for you ?
Word Count: 681
Author: Vincent Wilmot
Email: vincent@vincentwilmot.com
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What is the right kind of mortgage for you ?
Copyright 2006 Vincent Wilmot
If you need or want a mortgage, then you can easily get a
mortgage that is not the best one for you. Mortgages are
often missold by sellers claiming to be experts. One day
they all push Endowment mortgages, then Repayment mortgages
or Low Start mortgages or Overpayment mortgages or Fixed
Rate mortgages or Offset mortgages - and each type will
also have different interest rates available.
For any one kind of mortgage, lower interest rates are best
of course. But different kinds of mortgage may best suit
different people, though they may not have the same
interest rates. For some a mortgage is the only way they
can afford to buy a property, but for some a mortgage is
profitable cheap money costing maybe 5% net to free-up
other money for investing at a higher return maybe 10% net.
Good mortgage calculators can help you choose the best
mortgage for you, but many or the mortgage calculators
available are little help. But first let us look at what
kind of mortgage may best suit you ;
Savings and income small. A normal Repayment mortgage
should be best if you can get one for the property that you
want and you can afford the payments. (Some sellers may
help on a deposit or furnishing, or offer Shared Ownership
or Homeown schemes.) Otherwise, if your income is likely to
be rising then a Low Start mortgage might allow you to buy
a better property or to have lower payments. As an
alternative to a low start mortgage, a young new graduate
might reasonably consider a permanently low payment
endowment mortgage linked to a pension, though at the end
of it gambling whether some net lump sum may be collected
or may be owed.
Savings small and income large. A normal Repayment mortgage
should be best if you can get one for the property that you
want. (Some sellers may help on a deposit or furnishing.)
An Overpayment mortgage will be better if you prefer to pay
off your mortgage early, but an Offset mortgage linked to
your current account could help with that more cheaply.
Savings large and income small. A smaller Repayment
mortgage may be best, but if you can invest your money at a
better net return than the mortgage interest rate that you
can get then you should get the biggest Repayment mortgage
that your income can reasonably afford.
Savings and income large. If you can buy the property you
want without a mortgage, then only get a mortgage if you
can invest your money at a better net return than the
mortgage interest rate that you can get - and in that case
get the biggest Repayment mortgage you can afford.
Initial mortgage payments must be affordable for you,
leaving enough of you income for normal bills and expenses.
(If your income is small then a mortgage taking 30% of your
income may be difficult for you, but if your income is
larger then 50% of your income may not be difficult for
you.)
Mortgage payments in later years. The actual money cost of
a normal 'variable' mortgage is fixed for the life of a
mortgage IF interest rates do not change, so that the real
cost tends to fall in later years. BUT if interest rates
rise then the money cost of your mortgage could rise a lot
for a year or two and make it difficult to keep up
payments. Many partly 'insure' against this by taking a
slightly dearer mortgage with the first few years held at a
fixed interest rate. And if sickness or unemployment might
make paying a mortgage difficult, then this can be insured
against.
If you want to buy a property as an investment to rent it
out, then you may need a commercial Buy To Let mortgage
needing a deposit of 15% or more unless you can find a
seller offering a deal that helps with that. But if you are
already a landlord owning multiple properties, then you may
be better suited with a specialist lending arrangement
rather than individual mortgages.
About the Author:
Vincent Wilmot currently lives in Grimsby UK and has
several interesting websites including
www.buy-to-let.me.uk
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