Hello everyone. I am fed up with my mortgage (only 4 years into a 30 year) and I want to pay it off ASAP. I have about 115,000 left on it. I am already making extra payments on it but I came across a post on another website on a strategy and I wanted to see if anyone would recommend this or has done it. I have a personal line of credit that is 9% interest rate. My thought is, I would take 10,000 of that personal loan and make a lump sum payment on my mortgage. Bring it from 115,000 to 105,000. Continue to make regular payments and pay off that personal line of credit within 10-12 months. After I pay off the full 10,000 i would then do the same thing and make a 10,000 lump sum payment on my mortgage. It would then go from 103,000 (assuming the regular payments bring it down by 2000) to 93,000. I would keep doing this until everything is paid off. Maybe 10 years. It takes discipline but other than that, any reason why this is a bad thing to do? Yes i would accrue interest on the personal loan but it would get my mortgage down and eventually save money on interest. thoughts?
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Originally posted by ucbears22 View PostI have a personal line of credit that is 9% interest
This is a truly horrendous idea and will cost you thousands of dollars in interest.
Yes i would accrue interest on the personal loan but it would get my mortgage down and eventually save money on interest.Last edited by disneysteve; 07-19-2017, 11:12 AM.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
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* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Originally posted by Braje View PostWhy would you think borrow money at 9% to pay mortgage would be a good idea.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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so 9% interest rate on 10000 over 12 months would be 875 in interest$. time that by 10 years (amount i would need to do this to pay off) is 8,750. i think over the next 10 years i would rather pay interest on my regular payments plus 8750 than 16 years of regular payments (which adds up to way more in interest).
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Originally posted by ucbears22 View Postso 9% interest rate on 10000 over 12 months would be 875 in interest$. time that by 10 years (amount i would need to do this to pay off) is 8,750. i think over the next 10 years i would rather pay interest on my regular payments plus 8750 than 16 years of regular payments (which adds up to way more in interest).
And what tax bracket are you in?Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Originally posted by ucbears22 View Postso 9% interest rate on 10000 over 12 months would be 875 in interest$. time that by 10 years (amount i would need to do this to pay off) is 8,750. i think over the next 10 years i would rather pay interest on my regular payments plus 8750 than 16 years of regular payments (which adds up to way more in interest).
"Don't think Meat, just throw." (not an insult. A quote from one of the best sports movies ever)
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Originally posted by corn18 View Post
"Don't think Meat, just throw." (not an insult. A quote from one of the best sports movies ever)Gunga galunga...gunga -- gunga galunga.
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Mentally you may be ready but financially you're not there.
Have you considered refinancing to a 10-, 15- or 20-year mortgage?
For motivation I had a mortgage of 168k and paid it off in 10 years. 94k was paid off the last three years. I refinanced twice along the way.
It can be done
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I can't imagine a scenario where it would make sense to take out a high-rate personal loan to pay off a probably-lower-rate mortgage. Help us understand the situation a bit better.
Why are you fed up with your mortgage? Is it for a reason other than the interest you are paying on it? Do you dislike dealing with your mortgage lender for some reason?
What is the interest rate on your current mortgage?
Is there any penalty for early payment of the mortgage?
Do you take a standard deduction on your tax return, or do you itemize? If you itemize, by how much do your itemized deductions exceed the standard deduction?
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Originally posted by scfr View PostI can't imagine a scenario where it would make sense to take out a high-rate personal loan to pay off a probably-lower-rate mortgage.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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I couldn't stand it so I ran the numbers for you. Assumed 9% rate on personal loc, 4% on 30 year mortgage for $100,000.
Your way: borrow $10,000 each year on loc, pay it off in 1 year ($874.51 monthly payment). Cost = $3,459 total interest over 7.125 years (that's how long you'll need to take out loans). Total interest saved = $57,804. So total saved is $57,804-$3,459 = $54,345. Loan payoff is 7 years 1 mo.
Better way: Pay an extra $874.51 on your mortgage each month. Total cost = $0. Total interest saved = $56,854. Payoff time is 7 years 2 months.
With your way, you would pay an extra $2,509 in interest and buy yourself a month for all that trouble.
Hope this helps.
Tom
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Originally posted by disneysteve View PostThere is no situation where this makes any sense.
For example, I know of one private mortgage where the borrower declared "I want to get this *&^%$ thing paid off so I don't have to deal with that *&^#@ ever again."
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Originally posted by ucbears22 View PostI came across a post on another website on a strategySteve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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