Mortgage Questions
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@89th said in Mortgage Questions:
@jolly said in Mortgage Questions:
Finance for thirty if you wish, but pay it off before then. There are several schemes to do so and I highly recommend it.
Agreed, I still hesitate with giving too many personal details but yeah... our plan is to pay it off in 10-15 years. I know financial planners would say "Pay the 3% interest and make 5-10% in the stock market!" but I'm a simpleton and would enjoy not having debt.
I get that philosophy, but that comes from a day when interest rates were 11-12% (and higher, my parents mortgage in the early 80s was at 16%). Recouping 11-12% in the stock market carries a fair amount of risk so paying off early makes a ton more sense... But 3%? You can get high yield bonds that pay off higher...
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@89th said in Mortgage Questions:
@jolly said in Mortgage Questions:
Finance for thirty if you wish, but pay it off before then. There are several schemes to do so and I highly recommend it.
Agreed, I still hesitate with giving too many personal details but yeah... our plan is to pay it off in 10-15 years. I know financial planners would say "Pay the 3% interest and make 5-10% in the stock market!" but I'm a simpleton and would enjoy not having debt.
You are in good company, 89th. No debt gives you a lot more choices as to how to live, what you have to do workwise, all that. Making that small extra payment against principal makes a huge difference.
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@89th the big question is how close to Darwin will you be?
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@89th said in Mortgage Questions:
@jolly said in Mortgage Questions:
Finance for thirty if you wish, but pay it off before then. There are several schemes to do so and I highly recommend it.
Agreed, I still hesitate with giving too many personal details but yeah... our plan is to pay it off in 10-15 years. I know financial planners would say "Pay the 3% interest and make 5-10% in the stock market!" but I'm a simpleton and would enjoy not having debt.
I get you as well 89. Though if you’re locked at 3% and inflation goes up in the future - you should let inflation do work on your debt.
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I dont know much to add, but is it possible to get a 20 or 15 year loan? It will be more expensive at first, but (hopefully) your income will increase while the house payment stays the same. I think there is a big savings with the short loan.
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@taiwan_girl said in Mortgage Questions:
I dont know much to add, but is it possible to get a 20 or 15 year loan? It will be more expensive at first, but (hopefully) your income will increase while the house payment stays the same. I think there is a big savings with the short loan.
Yes there are 15-year loans, which we were considering. But we want to get a lake house (cabin) soon too, and with my wife not working at first, we wanted the flexibility of having a lower payment with the 30-year mortgage, and can always pay extra each month if we want.
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An update for those who care:
Ended up going with Wyndham Capital, mainly because they were pretty responsive when I had questions and others were a little slow on the response. I also had 3 lenders competing as I used one Loan Estimate against the next, when they would ask how I got a rate so low.
My initial lender said 30-year fixed conventional are averaging around 3.15% right now, but I was able to lock in at 2.75% with very minimal fees, so I'm happy. He wasn't able to match it, so I had to part ways... #sorrynotsorry
Here's hoping there are no hiccups during underwriting or whatever happens between now and closing.
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@friday said in Mortgage Questions:
Make sure you get a comfortable pen to write with. You will be signing/initialing a lot of papers.
Amen.
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@friday said in Mortgage Questions:
Make sure you get a comfortable pen to write with. You will be signing/initialing a lot of papers.
At closing? Maybe! But what's been funny so far... the entire process has used electronic signatures and initials. Realtor, purchase agreements, loan estimates, etc. ALL electronic. Way different than in 2009 when I bought my condo...where it took a billion signatures/initials!
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Real-estate brokerages may be fine with digital signatures, but state laws may still require real signatures signed in the presence of a public notary when it comes to deeds and liens. The paperwork you sign at closing is oriented towards formalizing who holds the deed and the lien.
Expect to get paper copies of things you sign, and be sure to keep the paper copies with original signatures.
Good luck!