Feilding-Rangitikei Herald

Zooming ahead on home loans

- ROB STOCK MONEY MATTERS rob.stock@fairfaxmed­ia.co.nz

A heartening picture of progress towards debt freedom has emerged from Westpac.

It says two-thirds of its customers are ahead on their mortgage payments by three months or more.

Owning a house is a costly business, both in time and money, so paying more than the minimum the bank demands takes commitment.

Very few homes are as their owners would like them. There’s always something else to spend money on that would get it closer to perfect, not to mention all the money you have to pour into them to keep them them maintained.

Getting ahead on the mortgage may mean making choices like putting off that new bathroom, or maintainin­g a frugal lifestyle, even while the capital gains machine you call home is enriching you.

What Westpac found was that around the country, those people ahead on their homes loans had paid between $3319 (West Coast)

and $11,146 (Nelson) more than they were contractua­lly obliged to.

Low interest rates and high employment have made the past 10 years a great time to get ahead on the mortgage, though postearthq­uake insurance premium rises have taken a big bite out of homeowners’ incomes.

Averages are always a bit misleading.

In Nelson, there will be people $30,000 ahead, and some only $3000 ahead.

I reckon $3000 a year isn’t bad over 10 years, while $300 a year isn’t what I’d call life-changing.

Not only do each of us have to battle temptation to spend, but we also have to battle our own natures.

Some of us are risk-averse, and draw immense satisfacti­on and a sense of security from retiring our debt.

Others are more comfortabl­e with carrying debt, or have different plans for getting shot of the mortgage, such as owning a

‘‘Low interest rates and high employment have made the past 10 years a great time to get ahead on the mortgage.’’

rental with the ultimate aim (don’t tell the Inland Revenue) of selling it, and going debt free.

Westpac found many people were choosing to mix and match fixed home loans with floating ones.

The fixed loans gave them some certainty of costs in the future, while their floating loans carried no penalties for paying them off faster than the bank demands.

The thing about floating rate home loans – and especially revolving credit home loans – is that they turn every spending decision into a decision about the mortgage.

Suddenly the cost of that Nespresso Lattissima machine is the $750 you pay Farmers as well as the $500 interest on carrying an extra $750 on the mortgage for the next 20 years, not to mention the cost of coffee capsules.

The same goes for everything from little Jane’s piano lessons to upgrading the car.

Roughly-speaking, an extra dollar paid off the mortgage today saves you 70 cents in interest over 20 years.

On its own, that 70 cents isn’t much, but $500 extra paid off each year quickly adds up to a small fortune.

So consider what your level of ambition is, and get going.

 ?? 123RF ?? Jet-propelling your mortgage payments can build family financial resilience.
123RF Jet-propelling your mortgage payments can build family financial resilience.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand