Billy Baltic
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There have been a couple of threads on this recently - run a search (from memory, I think it did matter).Would a holiday affect future credit rating?
I doubt very much this would come into the equation.Did previous mortgage holidays stop people taking advantage of the previous PTSB bonus?
I guess you could do that - but will it really make that much of a difference? Open to correction but most payment holidays are 3 months, no? - with 12 months being the maximum.I was wondering if it would be possible to take a payment holiday now with a view to maximising the balance remaining when a deal comes along.
That's not my understanding of the OP's post. From what I understand, he/she wants to maximise any benefit that could be coming from a potential deal on tracker mortgages. They are not saying they are not going to repay the mortgage in full. Any 'deal' on tracker mortgages would not be a write-off in the sense of a non-performing loan - it would be a deal on a product that the banks offered despite the fact that it's a lossmaker for them.aido71 said:your post suggests that you have a cheap tracker that you can afford ( no indication that you are struggling with repayments) but you just want to avoid paying
Forgive me if I have taken you up wrong ...
but you just want to avoid paying so that at some stage in the future you can maximise the amount of the loan( you voluntarily took out ) that you can write off completely??!!!
Payment breaks/holidays are there to give people a breather not to help with avoidance of paying what they owe.
If the finger needs to point anywhere on this - it's back at the banks - your own bank - and others. You can't blame ordinary people for trying to maximise a situation to their advantage. Remember, it was the banks that were pushing these products. I switched from one tracker to an even better tracker during the tiger - as another bank were offering an even more attractive deal. WHY they offered such deals (given that it's believed their feasibility from the banks point of view is a mut point) is something I'd love to hear the bankers answer...I know banks want rid of trackers but I guess I wonder if this is going to happen to the cost of others when rates rise as they must do at some stage.
Hi Aido
I assume that the OP is referring to a PTSB mortgage where there is a right to take two payment holidays of 3 months. If so, taking them with a view to using the proceeds to take advantage of a subsequent discount is perfectly valid.
There have been a couple of threads on this recently - run a search (from memory, I think it did matter).
I doubt very much this would come into the equation.
I guess you could do that - but will it really make that much of a difference? Open to correction but most payment holidays are 3 months, no? - with 12 months being the maximum.
That's not my understanding of the OP's post. From what I understand, he/she wants to maximise any benefit that could be coming from a potential deal on tracker mortgages. They are not saying they are not going to repay the mortgage in full. Any 'deal' on tracker mortgages would not be a write-off in the sense of a non-performing loan - it would be a deal on a product that the banks offered despite the fact that it's a lossmaker for them.
Forgive me if I have taken you up wrong but the tone and wording of your post suggests that you have a cheap tracker that you can afford ( no indication that you are struggling with repayments) but you just want to avoid paying so that at some stage in the future you can maximise the amount of the loan( you voluntarily took out ) that you can write off completely??!!!
Payment breaks/holidays are there to give people a breather not to help with avoidance of paying what they owe. If you are in difficulty then that is a different issue (and i apologise accordingly)but if not then it just sums up our society who do not want to take personal responsibility for their own choices.
If I sound preachy then just cos am fed up with everyone blaming everyone else for their problems. There's lots of blame to go around... At least some must be taken by people themselves.
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