| With mortgage rates continuing on a downward
trend, the competition in the business is fierce. A day never passes that I
don't hear some crazy advertisement about a new loan program that XYZ mortgage
company has and no one else offers. One of the oldest programs remains
steadfast in both its high profile and its duplicity. This program is the No
Cost Home Loan -- the one bankers say is free, but you actually pay for as long
as you have the loan.
The no closing cost home loan is virtually everywhere. It is advertised in
the mail, on radio and on TV all the time. "Hey, refinance your loan
today, and there will be no closing costs," the ads scream. Wow, a free
loan. Imagine the money you'll save. So, if you are in the market for a
refinance loan or home equity line, which you probably should be, with rates at
all-time lows, you might consider running to XYZ mortgage company, who is now
offering free mortgage loans.
Just be careful you don't go bankrupt, along the way. Remember, the old
cliche, Nothing in life is free, because it makes a lot of sense. You actually
can get a mortgage with little or no closing costs. What bankers don't tell you
(one of their great secrets) is that you pay a higher interest rate than you
really qualify for, when you get your loan for "free." So, you might
save $2,000 or $3,000 in closing costs, but your monthly payment could be $100
to $300 higher than it would have been if you had actually paid the costs.
Imagine taking this loan and saving $2,000 in total closing costs. Perhaps
you borrow $200,000. Now, if you simply pay all the costs and tell the banker
you want the best rate available, let's say it is 6% for this example, you
would have a monthly payment of $1,199. Now, let's assume the wiley banker
convinces you to pay no closing costs and take an in terest rate of 7%. He
might say, "Now, your interest rate will be a bit higher, but you'll save
$2,000 in closing costs." Sounds great, you might think.
What he doesn't do, though, is spell out the difference in the 6% rate you
could qualify for, versus the 7% rate you choose to take for your
"free" loan. If you borrow $200,000 at 7% interest, your monthly
payment is $1,330. This is $131.00 more each month than you will pay on the
same loan at 6% interest.
If you choose to pay the closing costs and save $131.00 monthly, it will
take you 15 months to get your $2,000 in closing costs back. Now, if you keep
this loan for five years beyond that first 15 months, you will save an
additional $7,860 at the 6% interest rate. If you listen to the crafty banker,
selling the No Cost Loan, you'll allow nearly eight thousand dollars to drift
right up your home's chimney.
Unless the difference in the interest rate on your no closing cost loan and
the loan with costs is a tiny amount, say .125%, you are almost always better
off paying the costs. Be sure to ask what the difference in the rates is. Then
learn exactly what the total closing costs will be. Calculate the difference in
the two monthly payments (one with closing costs and one without). If that
amount will pay back your closing costs in two years or less, and you intend to
remain in your loan for at least five years, pay the costs and take the better
rate.
Use this method, and you'll never go wrong.
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