77°F
weather icon Clear

How can I repay my mortgage more quickly?

Q: What are the cheapest and easiest ways to pay off my mortgage sooner?

A: Here are three options:

Increase your monthly checks by one-twelfth. The additional money you're sending reduces the balance of your principal, which is the actual amount you owe on the house without interest.

Make one extra payment a year. This works especially well if you get an annual bonus or always receive a sizable income tax refund. Just add the money to your next monthly payment.

Pay half of your regular monthly payment every two weeks. Although a few lenders allow customers to switch to biweekly payments at no charge, most won't do that, nor will they accept partial payments.

But you can have the money automatically transferred from your checking account to a savings account every two weeks and then transferred to your lender at the end of every month.

By the end of the year, you will have made 26 half payments, which adds up to 13 full payments — or one full extra payment.

Just remember that paying down the principal on your home loan more quickly will never reduce the minimum monthly payment or allow you to skip a payment.

It simply shortens the length of the loan and reduces the total amount of interest you have to pay.

Q: Should I pay a mortgage service company to help me?

A: No.

The biggest challenge to following through with a faster payoff plan is maintaining self-discipline. It's easy to start paying extra — until you have extra expenses or you forget an extra payment.

That's where mortgage service companies say they can help. When you buy an accelerated biweekly payment plan from one, you're essentially asking the company to make you pay off your loan early.

They collect your biweekly checks and fine you if you miss one of your voluntary payments.

According to them, the threat of those penalties and the hundreds of dollars they charge in setup and maintenance fees are worth it to save tens of thousands of dollars in the long run.

But they're not.

Start-up fees start at $300, and many service companies charge processing fees of anywhere from $2.50 to $10, plus monthly or annual maintenance fees.

Some service companies pay interest on the money they're holding, but that won't come close to covering the fees.

The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau recently brought a lawsuit against one company, Nationwide Biweekly Administration, accusing it of misleading consumers about the potential savings from its plans.

Nationwide was charging a start-up fee of $995, plus yearly administrative costs of up to $101.

The protection bureau noted that someone who signed up for the plan with a 30-year mortgage of $160,000 at 4.5 percent would have to stay in the program for nine years to recoup their fees.

Even if you only pay a $300 initial fee and then $10 a month, you will spend $420 in the first year and $2,700 over 20 years. If you don't make all 26 payments a year on time, you will have late fees added to that and wind up paying even more.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
Downtown Summerlin to host Paiute Spring Festival April 27

In collaboration with local partner Nuwu Art, Howard Hughes, developer of the Summerlin master-planned community, will host Las Vegas Valley’s first-ever Paiute Spring Festival at Downtown Summerlin April 27 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Nuwu Art is led by artist and activist Fawn Douglas, whose work focuses on art, culture, education, social justice and Indigenous sovereignty.

Celebrate Earth Day weekend at Downtown Summerlin

Downtown Summerlin, the dynamic urban center of the Summerlin master-planned community, will host two events Earth Day weekend to formally mark the occasion, while promoting overall wellness.

Cadence offers quick move-in options

Looking to be in your dream home in as little as 30 to 60 days? With Cadence’s quick move-in choices, you’ll spend less time dreaming of a new home and more time loving your new space.

Trilogy Sunstone to debut new home models

The community of Trilogy Sunstone in northwest portion of the Las Vegas Valley just introduced three new model homes from the limited-series Modern Collection.

Crested Canyon in Summerlin nears sell-out

Crested Canyon by Taylor Morrison, a single-family home neighborhood, is nearing sell-out with only a few homes remaining. Located in the Kestrel district of Summerlin West, just west of the 215 and Lake Mead Drive and south of the village of Reverence, available Crested Canyon homes span 2,242 square feet, priced from the mid-$700,000s.

SNHBA names Tina Frias as CEO

The Southern Nevada Home Builders Association has named Tina Frias, the most recent senior director of aviation at Harry Reid International Airport, as its new CEO.

Summerlin introduces new urban trail design

Today, Summerlin land planners will incorporate another novel approach to transportation via an urban trail design to expand access for cyclists and pedestrians connecting them to a future planned urban center in Summerlin West.

REAL ESTATE BRIEFS

Commercial Alliance Las Vegas (CALV) is hosting a free event starting at 8:30 a.m. on April 4 at the Las Vegas Realtors building at 6360 S. Rainbow Blvd. giving prospective members an opportunity to learn more about CALV.

Tour de Summerlin returns April 20

Tour de Summerlin, Southern Nevada’s longest running cycling event, returns to the community April 20. Presented by Howard Hughes, developer of Summerlin and Downtown Summerlin, Tour de Summerlin is expected to draw more than 500 cyclists.