Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Bi-Weekly Mortgage Payments : Will You Pay Your Mortgage Faster?

Bi-Weekly Mortgage Payments : Will You Pay Your Mortgage Faster?



Thinking of starting a bi-weekly mortgage payment plan? You may want to think again. A bi-weekly plan may sound terrific, but it's a program not without its risks.
There may be better, less expensive ways to own your home faster.
Click here to see today's mortgage rates.

Typical Mortgage : 12 Payments Per Year

The typical mortgage asks for one payment per month, which equals 12 payments per year. With a 30-year fixed rate mortgage, therefore, 360 payments are required to pay the loan in full.
Each mortgage payment is split into two parts -- a principal portion and an interest portion. The principal portion is applied to the amount that you owe the bank. This diminishes your remaining loan balance. The interest portion is your cost for borrowing from the bank.
As your loan moves toward maturity, the balance between your mortgage payments' principal-and-interest shifts. In the early years, a significant portion of your payment is comprised of interest and just a small part goes to paying down your balance. It's not until later in your loan's lifecycle does the principal portion of the payment start to grow.
This repayment schedule is the reason why after 5 years or so, your loan's balance has been barely paid down. The technical term for this repayment schedule is amortization (ah-mor-ti-ZHAY-shun).
Click here to see today's mortgage rates.

Bi-Weekly Mortgage Payments : 13 Payments Per Year

A bi-weekly mortgage payment program is meant to short-circuit your loan's amortization schedule. Instead of taking 12 payments per year, the bi-weekly payment plan asks for one payment every two weeks, which adds up to 13 payments per year.
Except that you can't make 13 payments per year on your mortgage -- that's not how a mortgage works.
With a mortgage, you pay a certain amount of interest on an annual basis and that amount is covered in your first twelve payments. The 13th payment has to go somewhere, though, so it gets applied to your principal balance; the amount that you still owe to the bank.
And, this is how a bi-weekly payment plan works. With each "13th payment", your loan balance is reduced by the entire amount of the payment. You reach your loan's payoff date sooner.
At today's mortgage rates, bi-weekly payments shorten your loan term by 4 years.
Click here to see today's mortgage rates.

Effective Alternatives To Bi-Weekly Payments

Bi-weekly payments plans work; there's no doubt about that. It's just basic math. However, there are several reasons why homeowners may want to avoid enrolling in a bi-weekly mortgage payment plan.
The first -- and most obvious -- reason to avoid bi-weekly mortgage payment programs is that homeowners choosing to self-manage their bi-weekly payments get better results than via a bank-managed bi-weekly payment program.
Here's how to self-manage : Rather than sending payments to the bank every other week, achieve the same result by making your regular mortgage payment once monthly, an adding 1/12 of your regular mortgage payment to your check.
For every $1,200 in your mortgage payment, in other words, add $100 to your monthly payment. By sending $1,300 to your lender monthly, you will "overpay" your mortgage by $1,200 annually, which is a 13th payment.
Assuming a $300,000 mortgage at 4.000%, look at how the math works :
  • Bank-managed bi-weekly mortgage payments pays off in 26 years, 0 months
  • Self-managed bi-weekly mortgage payments pays off in 25 years, 11 months
This math works because banks don't apply that 13th payment until the year is complete. By contrast, your self-managed system applies 12 times per year.
Click here to see today's mortgage rates.
Another reason to skip the bi-weekly mortgage program is that bi-weekly payments are a contract and once that contracts starts, as a homeowner, you're obligated to make those 13 payments per year no matter what.
By contrast, with a self-managed payment plan, you never have that obligation. You can choose to skip a month during the holidays, for example, then double-up on payments later on, or not at all. It's all in your control -- not the bank's.
And, lastly, if you find your bank is charging for it bi-weekly mortgage payment program, make sure to say "no" no matter what. That's just wasted money.
Click here to see today's mortgage rates.

See Your Mortgage Payment Choices By Email

Putting bi-weekly mathematics aside, the thing is, with mortgage rates low, your best alternative to the bi-weekly mortgage plan may be to get a new mortgage altogether.
Extra payments can speed up your payoff, but not as well as taking a zero-closing cost refinance, then putting your monthly savings back to your loan balance. Your mortgage payment stays the same, but your loan payoff date shrinks.
Assuming a 1 percent drop in your mortgage rate, the Refinance-and-Reinvest plan can shorten your loan's term 63% more than via a bi-weekly mortgage payment program.
And with lower interest rates, of course, comes larger long-term savings.
Click here to see today's mortgage rates.

Contact The Mortgage Mark with any questions!!

mark@themortgagemark.com

www.themortgagemark.com

Monday, November 12, 2012



September 12, 2012


Dear Valued Customers and Past Clients,

We have recently been made aware of a deceptive attempt to extract money from unsuspecting customers of banks, including our Bank.

Some Capital Financial Mortgage Corporation customers recently received a Litigation Notification from the Residential Litigation Group, PA. The notification indicates that this “Group” is intending to file a claim against Capital Financial Mortgage Corporation for improper lender actions.

While it may first appear otherwise, this notification is actually an advertisement for a law firm. In fine print on the form itself, it explicitly states that, “This advertisement does not contain or constitute legal advice.”

Do not respond to this letter and please do not send them money. We are taking appropriate action in order to bring such misleading advertising practices to an immediate halt. If you received this letter and have any further questions, we urge you to contact us locally at 267-704-0050 or 610-532-1775.

As always, thank you for being a Capital Financial Mortgage Corporation customer.