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HOW
LONG YOUR MORTGAGE RUNS
DETERMINES HOW MUCH YOU PAY
The first thing most of us think about when the time comes
to take out a mortgage on a new home is the interest rate.
Thats both perfectly natural and very sensible.
The rate of interest we pay can make an immense difference
- a difference amounting to tens of thousands of dollars
- in what the actual cost of our house ultimately turns
out to be.
Still, interest rates are far from the only thing worth
thinking about where mortgages are concerned. Other important
variables need to be considered too. One is the question
of whether to take a fixed interest rate of choose from
among the many kinds of variable-rate mortgages that have
been created over the years to meet the differing needs
of different buyers.
Another - and a very important one - is the rather basic
question of how long you want your mortgage to run. Even
with fixed-rate mortgages, a broad spectrum of time spans
is commonly available. In most cases the extremes are
15 years on the short side, 30 years on the long.
Some years ago, when a famous scientist was asked to name
the most powerful force in the universe, he answered the
power of compound interest. This reply suggests
that he was knowledgeable not only about the laws of nature
but the principles of finance - about what happens to
even a modest sum of money when it continues to accumulate
interest year after year after year.
Even at a modest rate of interest, money in a savings
account can double within ten years or less. The amount
actually paid for a house with a $100,000 mortgage can
turn out to be several hundred thousand dollars if the
mortgage runs for 30 years.
When you opt for a mortgage of only 15 or 20 yeas, on
the other hand, you chop off much of the growth in your
total obligation. But to do that without reducing the
initial size of your mortgage, you have to make a bigger
payment every month. As inmost of lifes major decisions,
the stakes are high and the trade-offs require careful
consideration. Above all, they require a careful examination
of your resources, your aspirations, and your personal
priorities.
Someone whos willing to make near-term lifestyle
sacrifices for the sake of long-term gains probably will
prefer a shorter mortgage. If your motto is eat,
drink and be merry, on the other hand, the idea
of squeezing extra money out of your budget for the sake
of a bigger house payment wont have much appeal.
If youre attracted by a shorter, faster mortgage
and think you might be able to handle one, ask your real
estate agent to show you just how much long-term savings
such an approach can make possible. Chances are youll
be astonished by the size of the number.
Remember, though, that a 15-year or 20-year mortgage,
by increasing your monthly obligations now and for years
to come, can sharply reduce your flexibility.
One good approach is to take a 30-year mortgage but try
to discipline yourself to make one extra monthly payment
each year. If you can stick to such a regimen, ultimately
it will yield the benefits of a 15-year mortgage. Meanwhile,
youll be less strapped if changing circumstances
reduce your ability to make monthly payments.
Whats really important is making yourself aware
of how many different options you have and gathering detailed
information about the ones that interest you most. A good
real estate broker can be your key to all the information
you could possibly need.
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