Money Matters
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What is your mortgage rate?
There a little debate on the rent vs buy thread about 30 year vs 15 year mortgage. Made me curious what people are paying for mortgage rates.
We bought new in 2013, 30 year @ 3.5% We could have afforded to do a 15 year but I like the "safety" of the lower payment with 30 years and at 3.5% I felt like we were already getting a low rate.
Now that DH has been unemployed for nearly 2 years I am the only income for our family. The mortgage is about 25% of my salary and I am happy it isn't a higher monthly payment.
Re: What is your mortgage rate?
Ours is 3.375% on a 15-year mortgage. It is about 15% of our annual income.
We bought our house in 2006 with a 30-yr ARM at 6.9% (with the rate set to go up significantly after 2 years). We had zero down payment and it was probably about 25% of our income at that time, I can't remember. This was obviously before the housing market collapse and new regulations.
Refinanced in 2008 to a 30-yr fixed at 5%; refinanced again in 2012 when it dropped to 3.375%, and that's also when we switched to a 15-year mortgage.
I know there's a lot of debate about down payment, 15-yr vs. 30-yr, etc. etc. but it really just comes down to making smart decisions, understanding exactly what you are signing, and not getting in over your head. Our original mortgage was one of those that a lot of people got that ended very badly for them, because of the ARM and not having a down payment. But, we knew when we signed the papers that we would have to refinance in 2 years so we wouldn't get trapped. Unfortunately, a lot of people that used these products just didn't really understand what they were signing up for, and banks were way too free in approving people, especially for more than they could qualify for. If we were in the same financial state now as we were back then, and we tried to apply for a home loan, we would have a MUCH harder time getting approved.
We built our home in 2014. We have a first and second mortgage. We put 10% down and to avoid PMI we got a 2nd mortgage for $27k (10%).
1st - 30 year at 4.25%
2nd - 15 year interest only at 5.99% but we are paying it off in 3 years.
We are glad we made this choice. We thought about waiting another year to save up 20%, but so lucky we didn't. We live in Colorado and the market is climbing quickly. Our home would have cost another $30-$40k more if we waited.
We have thought about refinancing to a 15 year, but instead we just pay double mortgage payments to pay it off faster.
Our mortgage payment is about 18% of our take home pay.
If he does lose his job, I only need to substitute 7-8 days a month to pay the mortgage as opposed to 12-13 if we had gone the other way.
ETA: At the time of original purchase, I put 3.5% down and at refinance we had 18% paid off. Right now, our PMI is less than $30 a month and should go away in 2016.
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We went with the 30 because we wanted the flexibility of a lower payment in case one of us lost our jobs. We can afford all of the necessities without dipping into savings on one salary with the 30 year payment, which was a sense of security we wanted. This will likely be our forever home because I don't want to be paying a mortgage in my 50s.
My rate is 4.9% on a 30-year. A little on the high side, but my credit was a bit sucky at the time. I put 20% down. My mortgage is 14% of my income, but also includes insurances and taxes.
I didn't go with a 15-year because the rate wasn't that much less and I'd rather have the flexibility.
There is no cheaper money you can get than with a mortgage on an owner occupied property.;
Just for some contrast, I also have a recent commercial residential property loan. I was required to put down 25%. The payment is based on a 20-year amortization, but there is a balloon payment at 5 years, so I will need to either pay it off by then or refinance. The rate is 5.75%. I discovered a high down payment, 10-20 year amortization, balloon payments, and a higher interest rate are very typical of non owner-occupied real estate loans. Not surprising.
The mortgage payment, plus insurances and taxes, is 34.5% of the estimated monthly rental income. Though this is certainly a different beast with a different puprose than a typical home loan.
Is it ideal? Definitely not, but I know we own a home for less than we could have rented so I'm ok with it. To rent in our neighborhood it would be $300-400 more per month than our mortgage. Our interest is pretty low and we don't have PMI so in the two years we've lived in our house we've actually paid about $10K towards principle which isn't horrible. I'd rather get at least a little return on investment by owning with a 30 year mortgage than paying for someone else's investment... Just my personal opinion. If we could have afforded a 15 year mortgage I would have done it. I wasn't as MM two years ago.