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Frank Okerson article on "9 Questions To Answer Before You Prepay Your Home Mortgage"
9 Questions To Answer Before You Prepay Your Home Mortgage
Copyright 2006 Frank Oakerson, All Rights Reserved
Your Mortgage 123 : http://www.yourmortgage123.com
We are all different. At different times in our lives we have
different goals and needs. You can ask different experts in
financial planning, Texas mortgage brokers, and your banker
"should I prepay on my home mortgage?" and you will get answers
from "that is the greatest idea" to "that will be the worst
financial mistake you will ever make". So what is a person to
do? Let us look at 9 things you need to consider and have
answered before you "prepay your home mortgage".
1. Do you have enough cash liquidity?
Never leave yourself cash poor. To pay down your mortgage early
is very noble, but not currently beneficial if you have not
prepared yourself first. The consensus among financial planners
is one needs 3 preferably 6 + months of cash liquidity (funds one
can turn to cash within approximately 48 hours). This is
availability of cash in the event of unknown events occurring.
The roof needs repairing and insurance will not cover it (not
storm damage). One loses their job and it takes 6 months to a
year to find comparable employment again. A major medical
emergency occurs and your medical policy does not cover all the
expenses - this is becoming much more widespread than it used to
be. These are just examples of life and there are many more to
list. The point is you need the cash to carry you through. I
want you to avoid the other side of adequate cash liquidity and
that is using your high interest credit cards to bail you out of
an emergency.
2. Have you seriously thought about the emotional and other non -
financial benefits?
I realize that you thought that paying off your Texas mortgage
early was just a financial decision, but it can have non -
financial benefits. Will you receive any emotional relief from
having "less debt" or "paying off your debt sooner"?
Will this provide more time and money with loved ones because
your house is paid for? Where would you prefer that money to
go?
3. Does your home mortgage have a prepayment penalty?
If you have been following my advice you would not have taken a
Texas mortgage with a prepayment penalty. However, if your
mortgage loan has prepayment penalties it could erase most or all
of your anticipated interest savings from paying off your
mortgage early. Now some ARM's have prepayment penalties for
the first couple of years. Are you past that time frame with
your mortgage? When in doubt contact your lender for the facts
on your loan.
4. Have you adequately funded your retirement programs?
Before you take your extra cash each month and begin paying down
your Texas mortgage have you maxed out your contributions to your
retirement accounts? If you are employed you have access to your
401(k) and 403(b) accounts. If you are self employed you have
access to your Keogh or similar plans. Either way (employed or
self employed) your contributions are tax deductible, usually at
both the state and federal level.
If you make additional payments on your mortgage these are not
tax deductible - because you are prepaying principle not
interest. So an extra $100 - 500 per month to your retirement
accounts will do you much more benefit until the accounts are
maxed out in your contribution than one could ever gain in
prepaying their mortgage. The presupposition here is that you do
not have your retirement accounts invested in CD's or money
market funds whose rate of returns is less than the interest rate
of your Texas mortgage you are seeking to pay off.
5. Are you an aggressive or a conservative investor today?
A conservative investor is comfortable with returns of less than
8% because stability and safety are of utmost importance. So to
pay off a Texas mortgage with 8% interest would be a very safe
use of extra funds.
An aggressive investor is seeking a return above 10% or often
above 15% who is willing to take a few risks to achieve a higher
rate of return on their investments. Now to pay off a mortgage
of 8% interest may not be a wise use of funds. Read the next two
sections to get a better answer.
6. Yes you can save a lot of money by prepaying on your home
mortgage.
Let me illustrate with some numbers, yes I have done the math for
you. First I will have a $250,000 loan at 8% interest. In 30
years I will pay the lender $660,388 total for the $250,000 loan
or an additional $410,388 in interest. Ouch!
Now I will make an additional payment each month of $300 to be
applied to the principle of the loan. I will make a total
payment $487,626 for the $250,000 loan and have paid the lender
$237,633 in interest. This will pay off my home in 19 years
instead of 30 and will save me $172,755 in interest. (It would
take 48 years at $300 a month for me to accumulate the same
$172,755.)
What if I did a little better, say $500 a month to be applied to
the principle of the loan? I would make a total payment of
$439,720 for the $250,000 loan and have paid the lender $189,726
in interest. This will pay off my home in 16 years instead of 30
and will save me $220,662 in interest. (It would take almost 37
years at $500 a month for me to accumulate the same $220,662.)
7. What would you be able to make if you invested those same
dollars?
Over the past 200 years the stock market has produced an annual
rate of return of close to 10%. So for an apple-to-apple
comparison with compound interest applied once per year and
starting with a zero balance let us look at what we could do.
Let us take the same $300/month invested at 10% compounded
annually for 19 years that would generate a sum of $202,590.
Now let us take the same $500/month invested at 10% compounded
annually for 16 years would generate a sum of $237,268.
The decision is your. Please contact your Certified Financial
Planner for their professional input.
8. What is the tax impact of my home mortgage interest (the law
has changed)?
If you have been following me someone is going to say "but Frank
you have not presented all the facts!" Correct. We get to
deduct the interest we pay on our mortgage loans. For many
taxpayers approximately 1/3 of the total interest cost of a
mortgage loan is erased by the tax reduction in writing off the
mortgage loan interest on their federal and state income tax
returns.
For 2005 returns the standard deductions are:
* $5,000 for single filers or married couples filing separately
(up from $4,850 in 2004);
* $7,300 for head of household filers (up from $7,150 in 2004);
and
* $10,000 for married couples filing jointly (up from $9,700 in
2004).
If your mortgage interest does not exceed these amounts you will
receive no benefit in claiming your mortgage interest paid for
that year. Please see your CPA for professional advice.
9. Should I refinance instead of prepaying on my home mortgage?
Contact your Texas mortgage broker to see if refinancing at
today's rates with your current credit rating might give you a
better mortgage at lower payments. This would save you money
monthly giving you more to invest in your future.
You can find the articles I write on
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Free-Reprint-Articles as they
become available.
About Author :
Frank Oakerson is a licensed loan officer #56753 in the state
of Texas. I am available to assist you in purchasing your first
home, bad credit mortgage, FHA Loan, VA Loan, you name it. At
YourMortgage123.com you will find a number of informative
articles, mortgage calculators, info on VA loans, mortgage
refinancing, stop my foreclosure, and getting pre-approved. Stop
by and let me get started on a Texas mortgage for your property
today. I have all of the information and tools you need to make
your home buying dreams a reality. http://www.yourmortgage123.com
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