Mortgage Options - which would you choose?

Mortgage Options - which would you choose?

Author
Discussion

BatForcePC

Original Poster:

443 posts

207 months

Monday 15th September 2014
quotequote all
I've decided to nail down my mortgage before the Scottish referendum (it will be "no" by the way, I think!) and because I suspect an interest rate rise before the end of the year.

I have three options in front of me and all seem pretty good. At the moment I have a £185k mortgage on a property worth around £375k and have about 13 years left to go, my current deal is BR + 2%, unlimited overpayments and no ERC.

The three options I have are;

1. 4 year fixed @ 2.29%, £900 fee, ERC & up to 10% overpayment per year
2. 5 year fixed @ 2.89%, £900 fee, ERC & up to 10% overpayment per year
3. 3 year tracker @ BR + 1.29%, no ERC, no fee and unlimited overpayments

I'm seriously tempted by the tracker but have never had one before so therefore look at the 5 year fixed as the "safe" option. Any thoughts Pistonhead financiers?


Sarnie

8,048 posts

210 months

Monday 15th September 2014
quotequote all
They sound like Nationwide rates?

BatForcePC

Original Poster:

443 posts

207 months

Monday 15th September 2014
quotequote all
Sarnie said:
They sound like Nationwide rates?
No secrets here - indeed they are!

Sarnie

8,048 posts

210 months

Monday 15th September 2014
quotequote all
BatForcePC said:
No secrets here - indeed they are!
Ha, I don't know whether to be pleased or embarrassed at being able to identify mortgage products!!


C0ffin D0dger

3,440 posts

146 months

Monday 15th September 2014
quotequote all
I shifted ours to a lifetime tracker recently, base rate + 1.49% (so 1.99%) with HSBC. Unlimited overpayments.

Seemed like a good idea at the time and my logic is that if the base rate does start to climb I can always switch to a fixed as the tracker has no redemption penalties.

So I'd go with the tracker.

Patch1875

4,895 posts

133 months

Monday 15th September 2014
quotequote all
I would take the tracker and do some hefty overpayments.

Clueless about these things thoughrolleyes

KTF

9,816 posts

151 months

Tuesday 16th September 2014
quotequote all
Option 3 for me. Currently cheaper than the other options and unlimited overpayments on top.

Mark83

1,167 posts

202 months

Tuesday 16th September 2014
quotequote all
C0ffin D0dger said:
I shifted ours to a lifetime tracker recently, base rate + 1.49% (so 1.99%) with HSBC. Unlimited overpayments.

Seemed like a good idea at the time and my logic is that if the base rate does start to climb I can always switch to a fixed as the tracker has no redemption penalties.

So I'd go with the tracker.
I did the same when it had a £99 fee. I was previously on their base rate + 1.89% so I soon started saving money. I used the same logic as you as I can switch mortgages if circumstances change.

TheLordJohn

5,746 posts

147 months

Tuesday 16th September 2014
quotequote all
Just chose a 2 year fixed. Should have gone for a discounted or tracker.
I plan on overpaying it to quite a large degree from the beginning of next year.

lamboman100

1,445 posts

122 months

Tuesday 16th September 2014
quotequote all
Option 2.

It is not worth gambling on big debt (variable rates / tracker rates).

Fix it for 5 years at the cheapest rate you can find (Nationwide may not be the cheapest)...

Overpay by 10% every year (some, like First Direct, allow unlimited overpayments)...

Save the rest of your spare cash in a high-interest savings account. Pay off a big lump sum immediately when the 5-year fix ends...

If you are earning enough, and disciplined enough, you can easily pay off that 13-year mortgage in 5 years...

Use this calculator to five-year-plan clearing your mortgage early:

http://www.moneysavingexpert.com/mortgages/mortgag...


Good luck.