Money Matters
Dear Community,
Our tech team has launched updates to The Nest today. As a result of these updates, members of the Nest Community will need to change their password in order to continue participating in the community. In addition, The Nest community member's avatars will be replaced with generic default avatars. If you wish to revert to your original avatar, you will need to re-upload it via The Nest.
If you have questions about this, please email help@theknot.com.
Thank you.
Note: This only affects The Nest's community members and will not affect members on The Bump or The Knot.
remortgaging- is it worth it? Any advice?
Hi all
Just a quick question about remortgaging. We were first time buyers when we bought our home, and at the time suspected interest rates to increase rapidly, we therefore went for a 5 year fixed term.Interest rates have increased but not a lot, but the value of our home has increased (accordingly to estimate websites- which when we looked at buying seemed to underestimate)
We are therefore considering remortgaging to reduce our monthly payments (Loan to Value ratio would have increased). I know we need to take into account the early repayment fee of our current mortgage, and the fees for the potential new mortgage, is there anything else we need to consider?
I would really value your advice/experiences on remortgaging.
Re: remortgaging- is it worth it? Any advice?
Do you have a balloon payment at the end, or is it a traditional 5 year fixed mortgage?
How much is the fee?
We just recast our mortgage (same 30 year term but we plan to pay in 10) but got the payment down after applying the cash from the sale of our last house. We are going to continue with the same payment unless we need that $ for emergencies. The we was also right or we never would have done it- it was free.
If you have just a couple years left, and there is no balloon payment I would honestly stick with it. Your mortgage was only for 5 years- most people finance a car that long. And after that you will have a completely paid for house! That would be something I would be willing to sacrifice for in the short term.
Just adds to that a bit- trust me I've been dealing with it for almost 2 months now. We moved into a house that was almost complete, and so I've had guys in and out ever week trying to finish it.
You do however need to get your credit cards paid off because you are forgetting about something as you charge to a 0% interest card- RISK! What happens to that interest if you miss a payment because one of you loses their job, or you get in an accident and can't work for 3 months? On your other post you said you were saving $ to pay off that card- quit saving and put the $ towards the balance. Get those paid off as quickly as possible, don't let them sit around. Do not refi your mortgage if you have early payment penalties- in the short amount of time you are taking about you would not get that plus your refi cost back out of the decrease in payment.
I am a Dave Ramsey follower as some others have already told you about. We don't believe in credit because there is risk involved in credit. And it is very peaceful knowing that my can will never disappear out of my driveway, and that my furniture is mine not somebody else's. It's also very peaceful having a paid for house- think about what you could do in cash with that house payment after its gone. You would have the money for your bathroom in no time. And if you have kids by then- hire it all done because you can afford to- in CASH!
We refinanced our home from a 30 year fixed to a 15 year fixed and also lowered our interest rate. Our mortgage company waived the appraisal. Overall it was very low cost refi for us.
Every mortgage is different so you really need to understand specifics for your loan.
TTC since 1/13 DX:PCOS 5/13 (long, anovulatory cycles)

Clomid 50mg 9/13 = BFP! EDD 6/7/14 M/C 5w6d Found 11/4/13
1/14 PCOS / Gluten Free Diet to hopefully regulate my system.
Chemical Pregnancy 03/14
Surprise BFP 6/14, Beta #1: 126 Beta #2: 340 Stick baby, stick! EDD 2/17/15
Riley Elaine born 2/16/15
TTC 2.0 6/15
Chemical Pregnancy 9/15
Chemical Pregnancy 6/16
BFP 9/16 EDD 6/3/17
Beta #1: 145 Beta #2: 376 Beta #3: 2,225 Beta #4: 4,548
www.5yearstonever.blogspot.com
It sounds like you are refinancing for another 30 year term, of course your monthly payments will go down, you are adding on 2+ more years to your loan. You aren't saving 3,032, you are paying an extra 14,272 over the life of the loan, most likely more since it will be variable again after 5 years. I would stick it out the 5 years, not pay any penalties, and refinance into a 25 year loan in 5 years, and after that a 20 year loan, then 15, etc. If you keep refinancing to a 30 year loan every 5 years (or less) you are wasting A TON of money on interest (and fees). When you are considering the cost of a 30 year loan, you have to look at the whole 30 years, not the next 35 months.
ETA: Just realized my math is bad above, but the point still stands.
I'd say that since you've done some estimating and are very eager to move forward, just have a professional valuation done. Triple-crunch the numbers that come from that and then decide what to do.
I think our hesitation on the valuation comes from the fact that we have a website, Zillow, that gives super-inaccurate appraisal estimates. Mine (bought very recently) was off by about 10%, and they usually skew high. Hopefully Zoopla is closer and you get the appraisal you're hoping for!