Midtablemanager
Registered User
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I requested my break fee on the 7th of June. I received the break fee letter on the 10th and the rate options form on the 15th.
My fee was valid until the 20th.
Slight update, I am receiving 2% cashback on the scheduled monthly mortgageHi Paul. Can you please provide guidance for the following.
- Current lender: PTSB
- Outstanding mortgage balance (how much you still owe): 292k
- Approximate value of your property: 700k
- The date you started your fixed-rate mortgage (month and year): Mar 2021
- How many years you fixed for: 3
- Your current mortgage interest rate: 2.5%
- Your current monthly repayment (excluding any overpayments): €1,867
- Your property's BER : A2
- Are you due to get extra cashback? No.
I requested my break fee on the 7th of June. I received the break fee letter on the 10th and the rate options form on the 15th.
My fee was valid until the 20th.
@Lmcodes 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).Current lender: KBC
Outstanding mortgage balance: €391,000
Approximate value of your property: €570,000
The date you started your fixed-rate mortgage: April 2022
How many years you fixed for: 3
Your current mortgage interest rate: 2.3%
Your current monthly repayment: €1444.19
Your property's BER: D1
Cashback?: None
If I was to do this then the only thing to pay would be the valuation fee which I believe is around €80.Switching immediately to KBC's 3-year fixed rate (2.25% with no cashback) will leave you worse off by about €20 over the next 3 years
@Paul F Any idea what the breaking fee for Finance Ireland is , if one was to break in middle of 5 year fixed , the broker gave me a watery answer, messaged FI , nothing on site , anyone have any experience of this ?Many thanks for the detailed prompt response !
@Gabe77 My savings estimates already assume a valuation fee of €150, even if breaking and re-fixing with KBC.If I was to do this then the only thing to pay would be the valuation fee which I believe is around €80.
So I would be worse off by €80 rather than €20 is that correct but I'd have an extra 15 month fixed rate (July 2025)?
@Leighlinboy Please your mortgage details in the format shown in the first post.@Paul F Any idea what the breaking fee for Finance Ireland is , if one was to break in middle of 5 year fixed , the broker gave me a watery answer, messaged FI , nothing on site , anyone have any experience of this ?
@Jubman Your break fee should be zero at the moment – but it is volatile because wholesale interest rates are volatile, so confirm it with Permanent TSB. If it is higher than zero, please post it here when you receive it, including the date of the letter.
- Current lender: PTSB
- Outstanding mortgage balance (how much you still owe): 292k
- Approximate value of your property: 700k
- The date you started your fixed-rate mortgage (month and year): Mar 2021
- How many years you fixed for: 3
- Your current mortgage interest rate: 2.5%
- Your current monthly repayment (excluding any overpayments): €1,867
- Your property's BER : A2
- Are you due to get extra cashback? No.
@Runner1 Your break fee should be zero at the moment – but it is volatile because wholesale interest rates are volatile, so confirm it with KBC. If it is higher than zero, please post it here when you receive it, including the date of the letter.
- Current lender - KBC
- Outstanding mortgage balance (how much you still owe) - 198K
- Approximate value of your property - 450K
- The date you started your fixed-rate mortgage (month and year) August 2020
- How many years you fixed for - 2 Years, about to come off the fixed rate
- Your current mortgage interest rate - 2.25%
- Your current monthly repayment (excluding any overpayments) - €1,103 - 18 years remaining
- Your property's BER (Building Energy Rating) – check it here or estimate it if necessary - A3
- Are you due to get extra cashback from your current lender in the future, e.g., "1% after 5 years", or "2% cashback monthly"? If so, how much and when? No
You cannot assess the savings from switching based on the monthly repayments alone. See @Brendan Burgess's thread on the topic.As above, about to come off our Fixed Term, looking to to fix for 5 years based on the impending rate increases. I have completed the following calculations; just looking to verify and make sure I am not missing anything. I used Switcher.ie to see the monthly repayments. Based on the below, it looks like it would not be worth switching based on the potential savings (€1,691 over 5 years to switch to AIB green mortgage)
[Table of savings]
But you also have to factor in the costs of switching and any cashback you might receive.The main thing to look at is the difference in interest rates.
One option you have is to immediately break and re-fix with KBC on the 2.4% rate. At the same time, if you were inclined to, you could start the process of switching to another lender. You would have to hope that the break fee when it comes time to complete the switch is low or zero, but if it looks like the break fee is getting too high (or if interest rates have risen too much), you could abandon the switch safe in the knowledge that you have secured the 5-year 2.4% fixed rate with KBC – provided you haven't yet engaged the services of a solicitor.time involved in process with the risk of further increases during the application process, would welcome thoughts/comments.
@Ada20211 What is the monetary amount of the 1% cashback?Are you due to get extra cashback from your current lender in the future, e.g., "1% after 5 years", or "2% cashback monthly"? If so, how much and when? -Yes 1% after 5 years
@FANTANA Your break fee should be zero at the moment – but it is volatile because wholesale interest rates are volatile, so confirm it with AIB. If it is higher than zero, please post it here when you receive it, including the date of the letter.
- Current lender - AIB
- Outstanding mortgage balance (how much you still owe) - 170k
- Approximate value of your property - 300k
- The date you started your fixed-rate mortgage (month and year) July 2021
- How many years you fixed for - 3 Years
- Your current mortgage interest rate - 2.45%
- Your current monthly repayment (excluding any overpayments) - €616 - 34 years remaining
- Your property's BER (Building Energy Rating) – check it here or estimate it if necessary - C1
- Are you due to get extra cashback from your current lender in the future, e.g., "1% after 5 years", or "2% cashback monthly"? If so, how much and when? No
Hi Paul, I believe it would be 2295EUR , thanks!@Ada20211 What is the monetary amount of the 1% cashback?
@Paxton
- Current lender: Bank of Ireland
- Outstanding mortgage balance (how much you still owe): €240,875 on 16 Jun 2022
- Approximate value of your property: €400,000
- The date you started your fixed-rate mortgage (month and year): 21 Sep 2018.
- How many years you fixed for: 5
- Your current mortgage interest rate: 3.0%
- Your current monthly repayment (excluding any overpayments): €1107 standard repayment, making the allowable 10% overpayment of €123 on top of this also (€1230 total).
- Your property's BER (Building Energy Rating): A3
- Are you due to get extra cashback from your current lender in the future: Yes, I confirmed today with BOI that I will receive 1% of the €265,500 I borrowed. Due €2,655 cashback at the end of the fixed period.
You cannot fix with Avant for 20 years (unless you shorten your mortgage term to 20 years). With Avant's One Mortgage, you can only fix for the full length of your mortgage – approximately 22 years in your case. The estimate for this scenario is given above.I’ve been looking at Avant 20 year fixed and the ‘One Mortgage, lifetime’ fixed, would be great if you could run the exact numbers on those please.
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