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5 Easy steps to paying your mortgage off early....

- Increase your monthly payments. Rather than choosing your amortization period first, ask yourself how much you can afford each month. For example, you may feel that you can afford $1,000 per month. You’re delighted when your $125,000 mortgage only demands an $800/month payment (at a 6% interest). But make a monthly payment of $1,000 instead, and you’ll shave 8.75 years and almost $46,000 off your total interest cost.
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Take advantage of lower rates. In addition to reducing the overall interest component of your mortgage, you can take the opportunity to pay down more principal faster – simply by maintaining your original payment. You should even increase your payment if you can, to reap the benefits of the cheapest mortgage money in memory. Again, you could take years – and thousands of dollars off your mortgage.
- Tie mortgage payments to your pay schedule. Many Canadians are paid on a biweekly schedule. If you accelerate your payments to biweekly instead of monthly, you could improve your own cash flow and fit in an extra payment each year. That means that you’re paying off principal faster – leaving you with less interest to pay overall. It doesn’t seem like much but – like putting your coffee budget to work – the biweekly strategy can have you mortgage free four years sooner, with almost $22,000 in savings.
- Use any bonuses, tax refunds or “found money” to pay down principal. This is especially valuable in the early years of your mortgage. If you receive an annual bonus or other lumpsum compensation, see if you can put it against the principal. An extra $1,000 per year is a great way to fasttrack to mortgage free!
- Consolidate your loans into a new mortgage and use the savings to boost your payments. If you’re a homeowner with some equity, you can use your mortgage to consolidate your other loans: student loans, car loans, etc. Add the money you’ve been spending on loan payments to your mortgage payments, and you could see big savings in overall interest.
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