newirishman
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Gordon,
I'd like to overpay by as much as I can afford. I figure this amount to be €150 at the moment but hopefully it will rise in line with expected salary increases over the 10yr period.
I was originally budgeting to save the €150 into a savings account to be used for my child's college expenses in 16yrs time, but I'm leaning towards Brendan's argument that it would be more prudent to first repay the mortgage to a 'comfortable' level, then stop overpaying and start saving aggressively for college expenses. I admittedly need to figure out what year I'm supposed to switch from overpaying the mortgage but maybe the most important thing for now is to start the overpayments.
I can see the attraction of having the certainty that fixed rates bring, and i don't think average variable rates over 10yrs will be less than 2.99%, but I would like to be able to overpay as much as I can afford without being penalised.
So you like (full) flexibility for repayments, whilst the bank should provide fixed rate over ten years. That’s just not how fixed rate contracts work, usually. The banks calculations work because repayment amounts are fixed as well, so they know how much will be outstandig at the end of the 10 year period.
If you already know how much you are able to repay monthly, set the mortgage period accordingly and fixed based on that.
If you don’t want a defined commitment that can’t change over ten years, than clearly a fixed rate contract is not for you.