Brendan said:
And in many cases, there is no need to pay off the mortgage on your home.
Okay, so I'll rise to the bait....
Seems to me there are 3 main reasons for paying off your mortgage:
1)
To increase the equity you hold in your home.
Equity is very useful. The more you have the more you'll be able to borrow and the lower the rate you'll have to pay for the privilege.
During a period of house price inflation, the rise in the value of your home will give you increasing equity. But, if we enter a period of zero property inflation (and there is arguably a significant chance of this in the short to medium term given the strength of the market in recent years) new buyers will suffer from high levels of LTV across that period, reducing their financial (and in consequence lifestyle) flexibility. If property values fall, not repaying/not having repaid any of your mortgage will leave you in negative equity and all that such a financial state entails.
2)
To reduce exposure to interest rate rises.
Clearly, the more of your initial borrowings have been repaid, the less costly a rate rise becomes for the borrower. If you doubt this have a play around with our old friend
http://www.jeacle.ie/mortgage/eu/. Plug in your own mortgage details and see, particularly through the "Annual table", how a rate rise becomes much less of a problem in the later stages of a repayment mortgage but an interest-only mortgage has no such comforting feature.
3)
To provide for the inevitable fall in income and likely change in income type you'll suffer on retirement.
Interest-only mortgage servicing is analagous to paying rent. I have nothing against rent paying. Smart renters enjoy hassle-free possession of good properties at reasonable cost and a degree of flexibility which is the envy of mortgage burdened "homeowners".
The problem arises on retirement when your income is likely to fall overnight and, critically, a high proportion of your income may become fixed. Suddenly, owning your home becomes a very attractive proposition. Imagine how you'd feel if rents started rising at rates way above rises in your income and you face the likelihood of being unable to afford to pay the rent to stay in your home in x years.
So, if you are going to decide not to pay off your mortgage early on, make sure you will have the means to pay off the capital sum owed on retirement.
So what are the advantages arising from not paying off the mortgage on your home? Tax relief on mortgage interest? Opportunity cost of repayments? I can see these points but can't see how these outweigh the arguments in favour of repayment for the average non-entrepreunerial type of borrower.