@Bronsontb Your break fee should be zero at the moment – but it is volatile because wholesale interest rates are volatile, so confirm it with KBC (and please post it here when you receive it, including the date of the letter).
- Switching immediately to AIB's 5-year fixed rate (2.45% with €2,000 cashback) will save you about €680 over the next 3 years
- Switching immediately to KBC's 3-year fixed rate (2.3% with no cashback) will save you about €380 over the next 3 years. And it is very simple and quick to do (no bank statements, salary cert or solicitor, etc., needed).
- Note that if you decide to do this, your mortgage will soon move onto Bank of Ireland's books, and they discriminate between new and existing customers, i.e., their best rates are not available to existing customers
- For example, if you were an existing Bank of Ireland customer, the best rate you would be able to switch to today is 3%
- So if you switch to this KBC offer now, you will probably not be eligible to switch to one of Bank of Ireland's low rates in the future and you will end up on a higher interest rate. When that happens, you may want to switch again to another lender, which will incur costs (and it might be impossible to switch if your financial situation has deteriorated).
- Switching immediately to KBC's 5-year fixed rate (2.45% with no cashback) will leave you worse off by about €20 over the next 3 years. But it is very simple and quick to do (no bank statements, salary cert or solicitor, etc., needed).
- The same warnings as above regarding higher Bank of Ireland rates in the future apply
- Switching immediately to Permanent TSB's 7-year fixed rate (3.0% with €1,939 initial cashback and 2% monthly cashback) will leave you worse off by about €600 over the next 3 years – but with the longer security of 7 years on a fixed rate
- Note that Permanent TSB discriminate between new and existing customers, i.e., their best rates are not available to existing customers
- For example, if you were an existing Permanent TSB customer, the best rate you would be able to switch to today is 2.95%
- So if you switch to them now, you will not be eligible to switch to one of their low rates in the future and you will end up on a higher interest rate. When that happens, you may want to switch again to another lender, which will incur costs (and it might be impossible to switch if your financial situation has deteriorated).
- Switching immediately to AIB's 7-year fixed rate (3.05% with €2,000 cashback) will leave you worse off by about €960 over the next 3 years – but with the longer security of 7 years on a fixed rate
- Switching immediately to AIB's 10-year fixed rate (3.2% with €2,000 cashback) will leave you worse off by about €1,360 over the next 3 years – but with the even-longer security of 10 years on a fixed rate
- Switching immediately to KBC's 10-year fixed rate (2.99% with no cashback) will leave you worse off by about €1,480 over the next 3 years – but with the even-longer security of 10 years on a fixed rate. And it is very simple and quick to do (no bank statements, salary cert or solicitor, etc., needed).
- The same warnings as above regarding higher Bank of Ireland rates in the future apply
- Switching immediately to Avant Money's 10-year fixed rate (2.5% with no cashback) will leave you worse off by about €1,500 over the next 3 years – but with the even-longer security of 10 years on a fixed rate
- Switching immediately to Avant Money's "One Mortgage" (a 2.55% fixed rate with no cashback) will leave you worse off by about €1,640 over the next 3 years – and the interest rate will remain fixed for the remainder of your mortgage term (approximately 15 years)
- Switching immediately to Finance Ireland's 10-year fixed rate (3.05% with no cashback) will leave you worse off by about €2,980 over the next 3 years – but with the even-longer security of 10 years on a fixed rate
- This product has a benefit in relation to moving home in the future that is explained below
- And your interest rate (initially 3.05%) will automatically fall as time passes and you move into lower loan-to-value (LTV) brackets. See the section "How we decide rate reductions" on this page.
These savings estimates use for comparison the scenario of switching to the 2.5% rate with KBC when the current fixed rate ends. And that's assuming that KBC (or Bank of Ireland, if they have taken over your mortgage by then) are even offering a 2.5% rate in May 2024 – it could be higher (or lower). The estimates also account for any fees (solicitors' fees, valuation fee) that you have to pay and any cashback offered by the above lenders.
It may seem like it is not worth switching to another lender but bear in mind that your mortgage will soon be owned by Bank of Ireland, whose rates are much higher than KBC's. So if you don't switch now, you might find that you really want to switch in a few years' time, at which point rates might be higher (and it might be impossible to switch if your financial situation has deteriorated).
All of Avant's rates, and Finance Ireland's 10-year and longer fixed rates, allow you to avoid any potential break fee if you move home in the future (as long as you take out a new mortgage with them, and subject to certain conditions). And in the case of Finance Ireland you can "take your mortgage with you" – meaning that you get to keep the same interest rate when you move (again, subject to certain conditions).
The estimates also assume that your loan-to-value ratio (LTV) is currently 97.0k/150.0k = 64.7%. A slightly higher property valuation (€162k) and/or a few more monthly mortgage payments and/or a small overpayment would get you into a lower LTV bracket (< 60%), and you would be eligible for lower rates from KBC, Avant and Finance Ireland. But that is probably not a good reason to delay the switch – i.e., you can start the switch immediately. Let me know if you want savings estimates for the <60% LTV bracket.
Bear in mind that interest rates could rise between now and the time that you complete any switch, so if you are thinking of switching you should probably apply simultaneously to two or more lenders for approval in principle (AIP).
Because your outstanding mortgage balance is less than €100k, it may not be possible to switch to Avant. But you should check this with more than one broker.