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These postings are provided as is with no warranties, and confers no rights. Additionally, views expressed herein are my own and not those of my employer, Microsoft. View Pradeep U.N.'s profile on LinkedIn
Bi-weekly Mortgages … What was I thinking?

Have you ever had a situation when you read too much into something, made some assumptions and consequently the wrong decisions? Well we all have! Here is my recent story on this. The Bi-Weekly Mortgage Payment companies

 

Background: If you had a mortgage you know its compounded and the way compound interest works – is that for the initial years you pay a ton of interest and at the latter part of the period – you pay a ton that goes towards equity. Biweekly payments towards the mortgage can reduce your loans tremendously if you do get biweekly paychecks (and I do) and if you are allowed to split the monthly mortgage payment and apply the payments split twice a month to your account. I even had a good spreadsheet on this to show that this line of thinking is correct.

 

Situation: A mail comes along with spreadsheets that says that they can do this for me for 150$. Bah! That is nothing since you make that much in savings within a yr (The way I calculated) … even when you factored in the $3 per transaction (every 2 wks) charge. Sound too good to be true? It is!

 

The RANT: Apparently the biweekly mortgage payment program takes money from you twice a month but gives it to the mortgage company only once a month “holding” your money for a while till its time to pay. So for the same benefit as before – you pay more in transaction costs, initiation costs and also opportunity cost of your money not held with you. Ofcourse the “selling point” for these firms were the 13th month payment that goes towards principal which eventually cuts your mortgage payoff from 30 yrs to a 26 ….

 

In other words – the biweekly mortgage payment is a payment you make to keep yourself honest and pay someone to take money from you! Especially transaction costs are free these days with online billpay.

 

The Result: Of course once I realized there was a clear miscommunication in terms of my understanding of biweekly payment and what was communicated to me – I realized I had immediately forfeited my “setup” costs since I had paid for it. But atleast I had saved the $3 per transaction payments bcos that can add up pretty quickly!! Sunk Cost I guess...

Published Wednesday, January 11, 2006 4:40 PM by Pradeep U.N.

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# re: Bi-weekly Mortgages … What was I thinking? @ Wednesday, January 11, 2006 9:07 PM

Sounds like a borderline scam, if you ask me.

tzagotta

# re: Bi-weekly Mortgages … What was I thinking? @ Wednesday, January 11, 2006 11:58 PM

You can do exactly the same thing yourself for no additional cost by bringing an extra 1/12 of your payment to the bank each month and writing 'extra principal payment' on the check.

Matt Berther

# re: Bi-weekly Mortgages … What was I thinking? @ Thursday, April 06, 2006 9:45 PM

I received a call tonight from someone wanting to offer me the bi-weekly mortgage deal at the same interest rate I have and I would save a lot of money.  No closing costs, no refinancing. I was skeptical.

So...I asked for them to send me info.  She said she could not do it but would set up a 20-minutes consultation at my house. I said I wanted to talk to someone on the phone before wasting my time.  No go.  I said send me information.  She couldn't.  Just the 20-minute meeting from what would probably be a high-pressure sales person.

I asked for her to call me back on Monday after I researched it.  So, I did and THANKS...sounds like a ripoff. I am have tempted to have the person come over to see what wacko comebacks they have.

Don't let them in your house! Have them send you info and then research it first.

Terry Strominger

# re: Bi-weekly Mortgages … What was I thinking? @ Saturday, August 19, 2006 10:39 PM

Bi-weekly payments are a semi-good practice for homeowners who want to pay off their mortgage sooner. However, it doesn't help those who don't have extra money to make an extra payment. Besides that, you still pay a lot in interest to the bank, regardless of how often you're making payments. On a 30-year fixed 6% mortgage, the first year you're actually paying 500% interest. Most homeowners only keep their home for 1-5 years. Even at five years, they're still paying a 100% interest rate. The 6% doesn't come into play until the mortgage has been kept for the full 30 years. A way for homeowners to actually pay off their mortgage in half the time, without changing their monthly payment, is to get a Cash Flow account. By paying less in interest to the bank and more in principle, and by having the principle actually earning interest, after 15 years your Cash Flow account has enough money to pay off the home. If you held the account for the full 30 years, you can have over $1 million with which to pay off your home and retire comfortably. There's a free site (http://www.just10steps.com) that shows homeowners how to do this. With a typical mortgage or bi-weekly payments, you're still paying a lot in interest, and after the mortgage is paid for, you've actually paid twice the value of your home, and don't have anything to show for it but a paid off home. Isn't it better to pay off your mortgage and actually have money left over? Of course it is.

Darren

# re: Bi-weekly Mortgages … What was I thinking? @ Sunday, April 01, 2007 3:58 PM

This is good to know. I have a monthly home mortgage payment but I didn't know that the bi-weekly was like this.

UK Home Mortgages Guy

http://www.ihomemortgages.co.uk

UK Home Mortgages

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