Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We decided to refi to 15 year fixed.
Anyone have any recs with who to go with?
OP here
I just refinanced with First Home Mortgage. Everything went well.
Anonymous wrote:It is principle not principal. Morons.
Anonymous wrote:We decided to refi to 15 year fixed.
Anyone have any recs with who to go with?
OP here
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We didn't bother and are at the same rate, 5 years in. We are set to pay our loan off in 4 more years. we are so heavily paying down principal right now that the savings are really not worth the hassle. FWIW, our principal is not that high (for DC at least).
Well, without refi you're wasting ~2% *350K/12 = $583.33 every month for extra interest you're paying the bank.
It's good to be wealthy and don't worry about peanuts like that!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We didn't bother and are at the same rate, 5 years in. We are set to pay our loan off in 4 more years. we are so heavily paying down principal right now that the savings are really not worth the hassle. FWIW, our principal is not that high (for DC at least).
Well, without refi you're wasting ~2% *350K/12 = $583.33 every month for extra interest you're paying the bank.
It's good to be wealthy and don't worry about peanuts like that!
Anonymous wrote:We owe 350K with 4.875%, 30 year, in our 6th year.
---------------------
We would like to pay it off in 3-7 years.
---------------------
Would we save money on monthly interest if we refi to 15 or 10 year mortgage?
Can someone point me to a website where I can calculate this?
thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Do you realistically think you can pay this off in 3-7 years? If so you will want to factor in how loans are structured. You always pay more interest in the beginning, and over time the balance of interest to principal shifts. So if you refinance now and pay the loan off in 3 years, you could end up paying more interest despite the higher rate.
What I would do is run an amortization table - to do this you need the original loan amount and start date.
http://www.bankrate.com/calculators/mortgages/amortization-calculator.aspx
See how much interest you are paying monthly now and compare the interest you would pay over 3-7 years longer of the current loan versus the interest you would pay over that same period if you refi.
Anonymous wrote:We didn't bother and are at the same rate, 5 years in. We are set to pay our loan off in 4 more years. we are so heavily paying down principal right now that the savings are really not worth the hassle. FWIW, our principal is not that high (for DC at least).