Best Way for Boomers to Pay Off a Mortgage

With the recent uncertainty in the real estate market as well as the continuallyplummeting federal interest rates more and more people are opting to refinanceThe average interest rate on an outstanding mortgage at the beginning of 2010 was 5979 percent according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis However lenders today are offering rates well below that benchmark making a refinance a nobrainer for manyWhy refi There are at least seven good reasons You probably can think of the first one  to get a lower mortgage rateBut low rates are not the only motive for refinancing a home loan nowadays The following are good reasons to consider a new home loan

Question:

Dear Dr. Don,

My husband and I are 51 and just got a 30-year mortgage with a fixed rate at 4.75 percent for a house priced at $116,000. I'd like to know the best way to pay off our mortgage in 15 to 20 years so we can retire without the worries of the mortgage.

-- Sheryl Shorten

Answer:

Dear Sheryl,

I think it's a great idea to plan to have the mortgage paid off by the time you retire. That's especially true if you're thinking of using a reverse-equity mortgage at some point in retirement for retirement income.

You can shorten the effective term of your mortgage by making additional principal payments. Use Bankrate's mortgage calculator and amortization schedule to see how additional principal payments reduce the loan term and total interest expense.

Hindsight's always 20/20, but if you knew going in to the financing that your goal was to pay off the mortgage in 15 to 20 years, and you could afford the higher monthly payment, then getting a mortgage for that loan term would have reduced the interest rate on your mortgage below your current 4.75 percent.

You could look into refinancing with a shorter term using Bankrate's refinancing calculators. The finance professor in me would tell you that the closing costs on the existing loan are a sunk cost and don't need to be considered in the refinancing. The closing costs on the new loan, however, do need to be considered, along with how long you plan to be in the loan, when deciding whether it makes sense to refinance.

Source: Bankrate

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