Home  |  Article Listing  |  eBooks & Resources  |  Books & DVDs  |  Legal  |  Contact










Are Biweekly Mortgages Really Worthwhile?


You may have heard people, especially mortgage lenders, extolling the virtues of biweekly payments, saying that you can save thousands of dollars and take 5-7 years off your mortgage--and then offering to set up a biweekly plan for you for as little as $400. But you don't have to spend $400 to begin saving money and time on your mortgage. In fact, you don't have to spend anything at all! You can set up a money-saving mortgage payment plan yourself--easily and at no extra cost.

The key is to look carefully at the fine print in many biweekly plans. You find that even though you'd be making biweekly payments, the lender may only post them to your account on a monthly basis, which means that you wouldn't be saving anything on interest, because mortgage interest is paid in arrears (as opposed to rent payments, which are paid in advance). Your only real savings would be in the fact that you'd be making the equivalent of one extra payment a year. That's a good thing, of course, but you don't need to pay someone $400-500, possible monthly maintenance fees, to be able to accomplish the same results.

Here's how biweekly payments save time and money: By making biweekly payments, you actually end up making an extra monthly payment each year. Over the course of a year, you'd make 26 payments (one every other week for 52 weeks), which is the same as making 13 monthly payments. Making one extra payment per year will shorten the life of your loan and save you thousands of dollars.

But you don't have to make biweekly payments to obtain those savings. Here are a couple examples of how you can save big money, using the same basic idea:

If you get paid every two weeks, divide your monthly principal and interest payment in half and then send your lender a check for that amount during those months in which you receive three paychecks. Just sending in those two extra checks will be the equivalent of one extra payment a year.

If you don't want to send lump checks, you can get the same results by dividing your monthly principal and interest payment by twelve and then adding that extra amount to your payment every month. Normally, that figure won't put too much extra strain on your budget, and it will add an extra mortgage payment to your loan every year.

You really can save significant amounts of money and shorten the life of your loan by making extra payments, but you definitely don't have to pay a lender $400-500 to do it. Making those extra payments is easy to do yourself, and at no extra charge--which is always a good thing.

Copyright © 2005 Jeanette J. Fisher All rights reserved.

Professor Jeanette Fisher is the author of "Doghouse to Dollhouse for Dollars," "Credit Help! Get the Credit You Need to Buy Real Estate," and other books. Real estate financing questions? Visit the new Real Estate Credit Help Center for articles, Credit Tips ezine, and blog: http://www.recredithelp.com




MORE RESOURCES:



Globe and Mail

PIMCO's Gross calls for massive mortgage refinance
Reuters
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Influential bond investor Bill Gross dispensed more policy advice than the US Treasury bargained for on Tuesday, calling for a ...
Famed Investor Bill Gross Calls For Massive Taxpayer-Backed Mortgage Refinance ...Huffington Post (blog)
Pimco's Gross Weighs in on Mortgage RefinanceMutualFundWire.com (subscription)
Fannie Economists Expect Housing Activity To Remain LevelNuWire Investor

all 1,308 news articles »


FHA delinquencies continue to grow, refinance apps outnumber purchase apps
Housing Wire
The volume of mortgage refinance applications exceeded the volume of mortgage purchase applications in July for the first time in six months, ...

and more »


Bridgeport 2, Mortgage Rates & Refinance Rates
MonitorBankRates.com
MonitorBankRates.com has a list of California 2 mortgage rates and mortgage refinance rates. You can also use our free mortgage calculator to calculate ...

and more »


Commercial Mortgage Refinance - Difficulties Due to the Credit Crisis
Stock Markets Review
There are numerous problems which can become obstruction in the way of anyone's commercial mortgage refinance. As the crisis of credit problem deepens ...




Technorati (blog)

The Time May be Right for You to Refinance Your Vehicle
Technorati (blog)
You are probably familiar with mortgage refinance options, but have you looked into the possibility of vehicle refinance options? The purpose behind this is ...

and more »


MonitorBankRates.com

Mortgage Rates Tick Upward: 30 Year Home Loan Mortgage Rates at 4.39%
MonitorBankRates.com
Current 30 year mortgage refinance rates are also lower averaging 4.38 percent this week. Current 15 year mortgage rates are averaging 3.83 percent, ...



Credit.com News

Home Mortgage Refinance Loans – Where Can They Be Used?
Mortgage11
Mortgage refinance with bad credit can also be done easily. Whether or not if a person can benefit from refinancing depends on many factors like the ...
Low Credit Score Mortgage RefinanceWarwick Beacon
Home Mortgage Refinance Rates – 30 Year Fixed Mortgage Rates at 4.25% on ...Subprime Blogger (blog)
Home Mortgage Refinance Activity Skyrocketed Last WeekMortgage Rates & Trends (blog)
TauNews.com (blog) (press release) -OfficialWire (press release) -Investing Contrarian
all 566 news articles »

Google News


Home | Privacy Policy & Legal Information | Contact

systemmortgage.com © 2007 | site by webbizinabox.info