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Have you received an advertisement
offering to save you thousands of dollars on your thirty-year mortgage
and cut years off your payments? With email "spam" becoming
more pervasive as everyone tries to "get rich quick" on
the internet, these ads are popping up with troublesome regularity.
The ads promote the "Bi-Weekly Mortgage" and for the
most part, do not come from a mortgage lender. Exclamation points
punctuate practically every claim:
» No closing costs!
» No refinancing!
» No points!
» No credit check!
» No appraisal!
» Save thousands!
» Cut years off your mortgage!
To achieve these wonderful savings all you have to do is allow half
of your mortgage payment to be deducted from your checking account
every two weeks. It’s easy. Of course, there is a small "set-up
fee" and usually a "transaction fee" with every automatic
deduction.
Essentially, the ads are truthful in almost every respect.
They just want to charge you money for something you can do on your
own for free.
The Basics:
Normally, you make twelve mortgage payments a year. Since there
are fifty-two weeks in a year, a bi-weekly mortgage equals 26 half-payments
a year. The equivalent would be making thirteen mortgage payments
a year instead of twelve. By applying that extra payment directly
to the loan balance as a principal reduction, your loan amortizes
more quickly, requiring fewer payments.
You save money. The ads are true.
How it Actually Works:
You cannot simply mail in half a payment every two weeks to your
mortgage lender. Since they do not accept partial payments for legal
and accounting reasons, the mortgage company would just mail your
half-payment back to you.
Instead, the bi-weekly mortgage company is an intermediary between
you and your mortgage lender. They automatically debit your checking
account every two weeks for half of your mortgage payment, then
place your funds into a trust account. Basically, this is just a
holding account for your money. In another two weeks, there is another
automatic deduction from your checking account, and so on. When
your mortgage payment is due, your funds are withdrawn from the
trust account and forwarded to your mortgage lender.
Since you are placing funds into the trust account faster than your
mortgage payments are due, you eventually accumulate enough money
to make an "extra" payment. The way the cycle works, this
occurs once a year. The extra payment is applied directly to your
principal balance, which causes your loan to amortize faster, pay
off more quickly and save you thousands of dollars.
Potential Problems with the Trust Account
Because your funds are held in the trust account until your mortgage
payment is due, there are potential dangers. Not only are your funds
held in this account, but so are the funds of everyone else enrolled
in the bi-weekly program. That is a lot of money.
Most likely, there will be no problems.
However, if there are accounting errors, mismanagement, or even
fraud, your mortgage payment might not get made. The first hint
of a problem will probably be a phone call or letter from your mortgage
lender, but not until after your payment is already late. Since
responsibility for making the payment rests with you and not the
bi-weekly payment company, you may find yourself digging into your
personal savings to make the payment directly -- even though the
bi-weekly payment company has already collected your funds.
Later you can work out the trust account problem with your bi-weekly
payment company.
The Cost of the Bi-Weekly Mortgage
There is usually a set-up fee that runs between $195 and $350, depending
on how much sales commission is paid to the individual or company
setting up the account for you. You also pay a transaction fee each
time there is an automatic deduction from your checking account
and sometimes also when the payment is made to your mortgage lender.
There may also be a periodic "maintenance fee."
Meanwhile, whoever controls the trust account is earning interest
on your money.
Savings of the Bi-Weekly Mortgage
By making principal reductions using the bi-weekly mortgage program,
your mortgage will amortize more quickly, saving you money. How
quickly your loan pays off depends on your interest rate and when
you begin making the bi-weekly payments.
On a $100,000 loan at today’s interest rate of eight percent,
your first principal reduction would probably be a year from now.
Assuming the principal reduction is equal to one monthly payment
($733.76), you would save $43,852 over the life of the loan and
pay it off almost seven years early.
However, you have to deduct from those savings any amounts you paid
in set-up, transaction, and maintenance fees.
No-Cost Alternatives to the Bi-Weekly
Mortgage
Instead of hiring a company to manage your bi-weekly payment, you
could accomplish essentially the same thing on your own for free.
Just take your monthly payment, divide it by twelve, and add that
amount to your monthly mortgage payment. Be sure to earmark it as
a principal reduction.
The first way you save is that you do not have to pay any fees to
anyone. It’s free.
In addition to not paying fees -- using the same example as above
-- your total savings on the mortgage would be $45,904. Plus the
loan would be paid off three months quicker than with the bi-weekly
mortgage. The reason you save more is because you are making a principal
reduction each month, instead of waiting for funds to accumulate
so that you can make one principal reduction a year.
Self-Discipline?
The bi-weekly mortgage companies claim that homeowners are not disciplined
enough to follow through with principal reduction plans on their
own. They suggest the reason for setting up the bi-weekly mortgage
enforces discipline upon you, and by doing so, they save you money.
However, in this internet age, banking on line and automatic deductions
are readily available. You can set up your own automatic deductions
including the additional principal reduction and have it go directly
to your mortgage lender. Since the deduction occurs automatically,
just like with the bi-weekly mortgages, self-discipline is not a
problem. Once again, you don’t have to pay anyone to do it
for you and you save even more money.
Conclusion
The bi-weekly mortgage plans do not really do anything except move
your money around and charge you for it. Plus, even though the danger
is negligible, you must trust someone else to hold your money for
you. If you can do the very same thing for free, plus save yourself
even more money by doing it on your own, why pay someone else?
The bi-weekly mortgage plan – who needs it?
If your goal is principal reduction and saving money, then it is
a good plan. If you do it on your own instead of paying someone
else to do it for you, then it is a great plan.
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