Familyman77
Registered User
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I was in a similar position a while back. My general thought is to stay variable... if you chuck a decent few thousand in savings in the mortgage, reducing the monthly payments but keeping the term, then your outgoings on variable 2.75% will probably be very similar to fixed 2.35%, whilst retaining the flexibility of the variable. Yes, it could go up and down, but with a small enough mortgage the difference in monthly payments isn't massive.
If it were me, I'd stay variable and aggressively overpay, reducing the monthly payments. Which then allows you to overpay more, etc etc.
I've actually signed up to the fixed rate. When calculating the break fee it will be zero so I will then overpay. The only change now is I will overpay quarterly rather than monthly. I will keep an ear to the ground of potential rate changes and if there is a sign if rates reducing I'd be hoping to pay the zero break fee and go back to the variable rate
I was thinking similar but you pay that way much more for the mortgage - best is to fix and overpay or to have only a small part variable when you start with AIBI was in a similar position a while back. My general thought is to stay variable... if you chuck a decent few thousand in savings in the mortgage, reducing the monthly payments but keeping the term, then your outgoings on variable 2.75% will probably be very similar to fixed 2.35%, whilst retaining the flexibility of the variable. Yes, it could go up and down, but with a small enough mortgage the difference in monthly payments isn't massive.
If it were me, I'd stay variable and aggressively overpay, reducing the monthly payments. Which then allows you to overpay more, etc etc.
I'm sorry Chris but that is the wrong way to look at it. A number of fixed mortgages allow some level of overpayment (eg. UB is 10% per year, KBC is 10% over fixed term) and in this case with AIB, there is a very very low risk of paying a break fee for any amount of overpayment.
The levels of overpayment allowed are usually more than enough for most people unless you have a extremely high level of excess income to use
Hi,I have a similar quandry....stay variable or fix for 3 years. I'm currently on 2.95% variable and can fix for 3 years at 2.55% with Haven
They will not say this. You are always allowed to make an overpayment but Haven will not be able to tell you whether you will be charged a fee or not because it will depend on the wholesale rates on each date that you make an overpayment. The simplest approach for you is to request a break fee every 3/4 months. If there is no break fee then make your overpayment. If there is one, then retain the money until your next request or until the fixed term ends.so if Haven come back and say no overpayments during a fixed term
That is really your personal choice and your comfort level with the risk of only having €10k of cash available. Your family situation and monthly expenses will impact this. For example, if you lost your job and have kids, you would likely have to continue paying creche fees or risk losing their spot when you eventually find a new job. If you both have good incomes, then that might not be as significant risk but creche & mortgage payments would easily burn through €10k fairly quickly. Personally I would err on the side of caution and stay closer to the €20k figure.Then one other question on that....the 20k savings is 6 months emergency fund (inc 2k for holidays or non emergency things), would it be worth taking 10k of that and paying it off the mortgage now and then once thats done, fix to the 2.55% for 3 years and then build the savings back up to 6 months and keep building a mortgage overpayment fund to pay off after the 3 years are up?
Hi Merowig, could you please explain what you mean by this? I would have thought the term will not reduce if you choose to lower the monthly repayment rather than shorten the termWhen you overpay you should always go for reducing the monthly minimum payment - not for reducing the term. This will give you better flexibility for the cashflow and the term will be reduced automatically at the end.
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