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Different Types of Mortgages

Although there are many different types of mortgages products on the market, generally they can be split into two basic types:

  • Repayment mortgage: Under these arrangements you are required to make monthly payments which are made up of part capital and part interest. The structure of the repayment method normally means that during the early years of the mortgage, little capital is repaid. The rate of repayment accelerates over time.

Repayment mortgages are normally quite flexible as it is sometimes possible to extend the term of the loan but only with the written permission of the lender. Also, it is normally possible to increase the capital repayment of the loan so decreasing the term, allowing you to repay your debt early.

  • Interest only: These arrangements do not require that you make capital repayments until the end of the loan. The monthly payments to the lender are made up entirely of interest on your outstanding debt.

In order to clear capital, at the end of the loan term, you must have an amount equal to the outstanding debt. Most people achieve this by making regular contributions to a savings plan; this plan is targeted to accumulate an amount sufficient to repay the outstanding debt at the end of the mortgage term. Any such savings plan (e.g. Endowment Assurance or ISA plan) should be kept under regular review.

  • Flexible: These are a newer style of mortgage arrangement. They offer you the option to increase or decrease your monthly payments (and sometimes even the opportunity to stop them altogether for specified periods. This flexibility is designed to assist you to manage your cash flow. Many flexible mortgages offer daily or monthly calculation of interest. This system could normally be expected, when compared with a more traditional mortgage, to reduce the overall amount of interest you pay throughout the loan term.

The latest addition to the mortgage range is a combined system of current, savings and mortgage accounts. The mortgage element will still be a repayment, interest only or flexible loan, but the amount of money in your current and/or savings accounts are taken into account considered when the lender calculates the interest due on your mortgage.

For example if you hold a savings account with a balance of £1,000, this amount will be considered by the lender when calculating the interest due by effectively reducing the total mortgage by an amount equal to your savings. Such arrangements are known as offset mortgages.

You may also find a ‘drawdown’ mortgage, which is helpful if you have a property that requires renovation. You receive a basic amount, but as you complete renovation work on your home, further amounts become available for you to draw down as and when required.
Further differences occur in the way interest is calculated on your mortgage..

  • Variable: the interest rate you pay rises and falls in line with the bank of England base rate.
    Fixed: the interest rate is fixed for a given time at the start of your mortgage normally from 1 to 5 years although this can be longer. Note that you may have to pay a higher interest rate when the fixed period finishes.
    Discounted: the lender gives you a discount on its standard variable rate for a given time.
    Capped: the interest rate is guaranteed not to rise above a certain percentage, but it may also have a ‘collar’, i.e. it will not fall below a certain rate. However there is normally a fixed timescale for the capped rate period.

Different lenders will offer you different incentives to take out a mortgage with them, for example:

  • Cashback: on completion of your mortgage, you receive back in cash a payment of some or all fees: the lender pays for your survey, or your legal fees, or will meet the stamp duty charges. The cash back could be paid as either a percentage of the mortgage amount or as a lump sum.

Some lenders will charge you an early repayment charge if you redeem your mortgage early, or want to pay off a part of it.

Please note where immediate offers such as these are provided it is common for lenders to charge you an early repayment charge should you repay your mortgage during the early years of its term.

What should I think about when choosing a mortgage?

To assist you to narrow down the search for your new mortgage, you should first decide which payment method best suits you. Whether it is to be a repayment or interest only. To help you decide on the method most suitable for you, it would be sensible to take into account your attitude to risk. Only a repayment mortgage can guarantee, assuming all mortgage payments are maintained properly, that your mortgage debt will be repaid at the end of the original mortgage term.

Always shop around for the best rates, but be sure you are comparing like with like. To do this check the overall cost of comparison of the loan. You also need to bear in mind that the interest payments in respect of fixed rate mortgages can rise or fall once the initial 'fixed' period ends. Therefore your planning should always include the possibility of changes to future interest payments.

If you are intending to sell your home in the near future, check whether there are any early repayment charges attached to the mortgage or if your mortgage deal will allow you to take the mortgage on to the next property.

Check what arrangement fees the lender charges and whether these are refundable should you decide not to proceed midway through the application process.

Check for additional costs such as higher lending charges and buildings and contents insurance.

Consider using a mortgage broker and taking independent financial advice, this can save you a lot of time checking the differences between the various lenders; it can also help clarify which mortgage package best suits your circumstances.

More information on interest only mortgages

If you elect to have an interest only mortgage then your payment to the lender only represents the interest due on the outstanding debt. In order to repay that debt then, you would normally use an additional savings vehicle. This is likely to be one that enables you to build a fund of money from which you can clear the mortgage at the end of the agreed term. The lender may also expect you to have sufficient life assurance cover to enable your next of kin to repay the debt if you die during the term of the mortgage.

The three most common savings vehicles used for mortgage repayment are:-

  • ISA: you can benefit from the tax concessions available within these plans. Under current legislation any income or gains achieved from your ISA plan are tax-free. It is from the proceeds of your plan that pay off your mortgage. An added opportunity, if your ISA performs exceptionally well, or you can afford additional payments to it, is that you may be able to repay your mortgage ahead of schedule. On the other hand, if your ISA does not perform well, you may not have sufficient funds to repay your mortgage. You should regularly review how your ISA is performing throughout the term, to ensure you are on track to repay your mortgage and be prepared for short term fluctuations in the value.

All types of ISA are free of capital gains tax. So, if your ISA increases in value, you make a 'capital gain', but you do not have to pay capital gains tax on this increase.

  • Pension: by using the tax-free lump sum facility available from your pension plan to pay off your mortgage debt, you can take advantage of the tax relief that may be available on pension contributions. You must remember that under normal circumstances the benefits under pension plans may not be drawn before age 50 increasing to 55 from 2010. Therefore the earliest likely date at which you could repay your mortgage debt would be 50 increasing to 55 from 2010.

If pension benefits are provided by your employer, these cannot normally be taken until you actually retire from that employment. If you are looking to pay off your mortgage earlier than when you retire then a Pension may not be the appropriate repayment vehicle for your needs.

Since part of your pension fund is being used to clear the mortgage debt, you should be aware that your income in retirement will reflect this fact as less money will be available for the provision of income. Careful consideration needs to be given to this repayment method. You would be wise to seek advice from your financial adviser before adopting this approach.

  • Endowment: These are Life Assurance policies that serve two purposes. Firstly they provide financial protection in case you die before the end of the mortgage term. Secondly, if you survive throughout the policy term, the investment element of the policy provides a lump sum (maturity value) that can be used to repay the outstanding mortgage debt.

The use of these arrangements has been very popular in the past but has received negative press coverage during in the 1990s. There is some suggestion that many of the problems were associated with poor advice when homebuyers first took out the endowment policies along side their mortgage loans. It must be understood that endowment policies are long-term investments, the value of which may rise and fall in line with the stock market. However over 25 years, they may yield more than the amount you need to pay off your mortgage although there are no guarantees available.

There are three types of endowment policies:

  • With profits: you share in the profit of the life company through which you buy the policy. This profit is added to the amount in your funds
  • Unit-linked: the value of your units rise and fall in line with the underlying funds into which your money is being invested
  • Unitised with profits: a new version of the traditional with profits concept that provides the ability to value the policy quick and allows the charges to be specified and collected in a similar manner to a unit linked plan.

Please note that none of the above methods are guaranteed to repay your mortgage at the end of the mortgage term.

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