Something like this for me on 5 year fixed rate 2.35%, Was 4 months into it and asked for the Break fee which was 0. So emailed in the AIB amendment form to refix for another 5 years. Got a letter a week later confirming my new fixed period and the interest rate.2 years in to the 5 year Green rate, I sent an email to AIB requesting a breakage quote.
About a week later I got a response via post with a quote of €0
Immediately sent in the rate change form selecting the same rate
Got correspondence via post about a week after that confirming my new 5 year term, expiring in 2027
Many thanks to all in this thread for raising awareness of this possibility!
No harm in trying.I wonder if you can put in an instruction in the email when submitting, to say that if the rate has changed between when it was submitted and when they process it, that you don't want them to proceed.
i.e. you only want them to process it if it is the same rate as what you are expecting, I wonder will they entertain that.
Hi thanks, i asked that very question in a different post, thanks for sharing your experience..2 years in to the 5 year Green rate, I sent an email to AIB requesting a breakage quote.
About a week later I got a response via post with a quote of €0
Immediately sent in the rate change form selecting the same rate
Got correspondence via post about a week after that confirming my new 5 year term, expiring in 2027
Many thanks to all in this thread for raising awareness of this possibility!
Note that having a balance of less than €100k will rule out the option of switching to Avant. That may or may not matter to you.We've just switched to AIB 5-year rate at 2.1%. I know longer term fixed might have been better with €160k and 20 years left but I was thinking we could overpay and have less than €100k left after the 5 years.
See this post (question 3) and the next post.What is the process for overpaying now? I know there should be no break fee but if we wanted to pay a regular overpayment rather than a lumpsum, do we need to request a break fee every month or if we just assume there will be no fee, just send the extra payment?
You could be the guinea pig and see what happens if you make a (small) overpayment without having requested the break fee quote! I take no responsibility for any consequences
That's good to hear. Do you do it regularly? I know most banks allow 10% overpayment without having to workout a break fee. Seems AIB don't have this?We've done this recently. Made a small overpayment directly through online banking just to see what the default action would be.
As expected, we got a letter about 2 weeks later confirming no break fee and that the monthly payment would reduce going forward, i.e. the term was maintained.
No that was the first time we've done an overpayment like that and it was mainly to confirm the term was not reduced before we make further overpayments with online banking.That's good to hear. Do you do it regularly? I know most banks allow 10% overpayment without having to workout a break fee. Seems AIB don't have this?
I plan on doing it every month. Bit of a waste of paper (and time) them having to send the letter out every time.
I do this for two years every monthWe've done this recently. Made a small overpayment directly through online banking just to see what the default action would be.
As expected, we got a letter about 2 weeks later confirming no break fee and that the monthly payment would reduce going forward, i.e. the term was maintained.
If I was to submit a rate change application to restart my 5 year fixed rate with AIB today, what are the chances of AIB upping their fixed rates between now and say two weeks time when they get around to processing my application, causing me to end up fixing on a higher rate?
I wonder if you can put in an instruction in the email when submitting, to say that if the rate has changed between when it was submitted and when they process it, that you don't want them to proceed.
i.e. you only want them to process it if it is the same rate as what you are expecting, I wonder will they entertain that.
Thanks for the fast reply Paul.Difficult to say when AIB will put up their rates but @BigPineapple suggested:
But we don't know if AIB would respect that instruction.
Ask yourself what you have to gain by doing this versus what you might lose if it goes wrong. E.g., another ~12 months on the current rate (if it gets processed in time) versus 5 years on the higher rate (if it goes wrong). Doesn't seem like a great bet.
In case it helps yourself or anyone else.Thanks for the fast reply Paul.
I was thinking along the same lines as you, I just needed a second opinion I guess..... I have deleted the application form, let us never speak of this again!
I moved from BOI to AIB a few years ago and saved a load of money, then saved a bit more money by fixing earlier this year, I guess it's time to hold steady now, especially considering where I'd be if I had stuck with BOI.
Thanks again.
I am currently on 3% with AIB. Tracker retention product, so originally it was 0.25 above the ECB, moved house and it turned into 1.25 above the ECB. Now with the rate increases it's 3%. With about 12 years and 80k left in an A rated house I am wondering should I move to the green 5 year fixed because if I can overpay without penalty then that would be perfect. I will be overpaying a lot, ideally monthly and with bonus.
Could you please share the formula with me?I've over paid every month since June, no penalty yet. Started the first one with small amount just to try it out. Since then I didn't bother with ringing up and so far so good. I guess once you work based on their formula and it comes out good, then you'd be fine.
Could you please share the formula with me?
Also, their email address please where I can inform them not to proceed in the event fixed rates have gone up.
I requested a break fee about 6 weeks ago and never received letter from them.
I want to reduce monthly payments by paying a lump sump.
I am on AIB's 2.15% - 5 year fixed green rate.
Thank you
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