Your break fee should be zero at the moment – but it is volatile because wholesale interest rates are volatile, so confirm it with Bank of Ireland (and please post it here when you receive it, including the date of the letter). In your case, the break fee is extra volatile because there is so long left on your fixed rate.Also, we are planning to borrow an extra €150k for an extension/upgrade when we can find a builder not quoting telephone numbers
- Current lender BOI
- Outstanding mortgage balance (how much you still owe) €390,000
- Approximate value of your property €750,000
- The date you started your fixed-rate mortgage (month and year) Sep 2018
- How many years you fixed for 10 years
- Your current mortgage interest rate 3%
- Your current monthly repayment (excluding any overpayments) €2,021
- Your property's BER (Building Energy Rating) – estimated if necessary - not sure - guessing C ? - built in 1990 (all windows and doors upgraded 6 years ago)
- 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, due 1% (€4,000) in Sep 2023
- Switching immediately to Permanent TSB's 5-year fixed rate (2.55% with €10,800 initial cashback and 2% monthly cashback) will save you about €16,880 over the next 4 years
- Switching immediately to AIB's 4-year fixed rate (2.2% with €2,000 cashback) will save you about €12,940 over the next 4 years
- Switching immediately to Avant Money's 7-year fixed rate (2.15% with no cashback) will save you about €11,920 over the next 4 years – but with the longer security of 7 years on a fixed rate
- Switching immediately to Avant Money's 10-year fixed rate (2.3% with no cashback) will save you about €8,860 over the next 4 years – but with the even longer security of 10 years on a fixed rate
- Switching immediately to Avant Money's 15-year fixed rate (2.5% with no cashback) will save you about €4,780 over the next 4 years – but with the even longer security of 15 years on a fixed rate
N.B. All of the above estimates (both the Bank of Ireland scenario and the other scenarios) assume that you are borrowing the extra €150k, and have increased your monthly repayments to keep your remaining mortgage term unchanged. You will need to check that the above lenders allow a €150k topup. (See this thread and consider posting your own question about the topup there.)
Note that the longer you fix for, the higher the break fee could potentially be in the future, which could be relevant if you want to move home. Of course, it's also possible for a future break fee to be small or zero. And at least some of Avant's fixed rates allow you to "take your mortgage with you" if you move home. It would be worth contacting them for clarification on which mortgages this applies to and on the terms and conditions.
If you were borrowing €540k and you got a property valuation above €772k, you would be eligible for lower rates (0.1% lower) from Avant. That would make the Avant 7-year rate better than the AIB 4-year rate in terms of savings (but that all becomes irrelevant if Avant won't give you a €150k topup).
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