Avoid expensive mortgages for as little as £3

by Money Doctor Monday 02 June, 2008

You can avoid expensive mortgages by saving as little as £3 a day; equivalent to the cost of a daily cappuccino...

As house prices continue to decline, many of you homeowners could face more than paper-losses on your properties.

Falling house prices means that even those of you who are diligent in paying your mortgage may not meet your mortgage lenders' stringent requirements when your current mortgage deal ends.

Impartial money website Fool.co.uk has urged you homeowners to take immediate action as mortgage lenders continue to restrict their best mortgages to those of you whose mortgages are small compared to the value of your properties.

The cut-off point is typically a mortgage with a Loan-to-Value (LTV) of 90%. In other words, if you are borrowing more than 90% of the value of a property, then you are forced to go on to Standard Variable Rate mortgages.

  • What a fall in house prices mean
If house prices remain flat, if you are a homeowner that started with a 100% mortgage, you will reduce your loan to 90% of the property value after five years. On a typical £200,000 mortgage at 5.5%, the loan will shrink to £178,543 after 60 monthly payments of £1,228.

But if property prices fall 5%, the outstanding loans will still be 93% of the value of your home after five years, which is above the 90% threshold for better mortgage deals. That's because even though you have been paying off your mortgage steadily, the value of the property has dropped to £190,000. It will take seven years to reduce the loan to 90% of the property value.

If house prices fall 10%, it will take eight years to reach 90% LTV, and 11 years if property values slump 20%.

  • How to put yourself in control
A 5% drop in house prices means that you must cut the outstanding mortgage to £171,000 within 5 years to comply with the 90% LTV criteria.

Overpaying by £109 a month, or £3 a day, is all it takes to achieve this. And it's not hard to save £3 a day if you forego a fancy coffee every day!

If house prices fall 10%, you will need to overpay by £240 a month. But if property prices fall 20%, you must overpay by £500 a month.

David Kuo, Head of Personal Finance at Fool.co.uk, said:

"The toxic cocktail of easing property prices and tougher lending criteria means that homeowners must act now to avoid ugly mortgage deals when their current arrangements end.
"A modest fall in house prices means that small overpayments of £3 a day will be enough to reduce the loan-to value to 90%. This is equivalent to giving up a store-bought cappuccino every day.
"But if prices fall by as much as 20%, then extreme savings will be required. Extreme circumstances require extreme measures. So total up what you need to cover bare essentials, and cut out everything else.
"That's right. Extreme savings are required when times are hard. But hard times come and go. If your resolve weakens, just ask yourself if it's more relaxing paying to watch repeats on cable television or knowing that you can afford to pay your mortgage."
So, despite how tough things are financially, you can do some things to help yourself.

It just takes some prioritising!

Related stories

Getting a mortgage; should you use a broker or a lender

Get a new mortgage and go to Barbados

No account, no mortgage says Halifax

Source © Fool.co.uk 2008

Categories for this post: Mortgages

Related posts

Comments

Annamaria says:

Thursday 05 June, 2008 / 08:06

Hello

I have been sold a credit card by my Nat West Bank on 13months interest free. The lady at the bank told me she had one herself and the only thing you couldn't do was draw cash on it. After my bill came I realised I was being charged interest. I went into the bank and they found out that the card was 13months interest free on credit transfers. I don't have another credit card so why would I want this type of card. I rang the credit card company who said I had been mis sold the card and it was up to my bank to sort it. They promised to ring me 2 weeks ago. Im not the type of person to deal with things like this and it is making me ill. The bank has never rung me and I need to take this further can you help

Gareth says:

Thursday 05 June, 2008 / 11:06

Annamaria

Meet with someone from your bank, explain the conversation you've had with the CC company and ask them what they are going to do. If they do not help, explain that you are going to esclate the situation with the bank.

Write to the bank and the CC company setting out your complaint and explain that they need to resolve within 28 days, or you will write to the Ombudsman.

If they do not resolve it / take steps to sensibly resolve within 28 days, write to the Ombudsman - this costs the finance companies money and time, so they will want to avoid.

Also write to the money columns of Sunday newspapers to name and shame the bank and CC company.

In the meantime, make your payments on time and try to pay off to minimise the loss and not damage your CC.

G

mike richards says:

Thursday 05 June, 2008 / 18:06

i have a loan from FIRSTPLUS,i asked them at the begining of january 08 if i could have a 1 month payment break as we had some unexpected expense,this was 3 weeks before my monthly payment was due,i heard nothing from them so i thought it would be ok to take this 1 month payment break,2 days after my payment date was due they phoned me to ask why i had not paid jans payment and i told them that i had written to them 3 weeks earlier asking for a payment break,the person i spoke to said that was ok and jan payment would be placed on my loan total,since then i have had over 350 phone calls,yes your not seing things over 350 calls asking me why i had not paid in january,after explaning this tpo them many times there phone calls continued and still do,i have written to them many times,they are an untrustworthy business and i would never use first plus again,they change there story,they lie to there customeres,i am now seeking advise from the ombudsman,hope they can help,

Add comment

(required)

(required, will not be published)
 
(optional)

[b][/b] - [i][/i] - [u][/u]- [quote][/quote]



Live preview

says:

Thursday 28 August, 2008 / 08:44


Recent comments