6k - pay down mortgage or put into savings?
Discussion
My company shares are maturing next month and I am due to get about 6k back. We have some savings to one side so I’m wondering if I whack it in a savings account for a year or 2 or pay off a bit of the mortgage.
Mortgage doesn’t renew until 2025 but we’re on a rate of 1.53% on a 280k mortgage so I am tempted to whack more of the mortgage down to help when we come to renew we’re not paying tons.
Just wanted to get the PH financial advisors view on things.
Mortgage doesn’t renew until 2025 but we’re on a rate of 1.53% on a 280k mortgage so I am tempted to whack more of the mortgage down to help when we come to renew we’re not paying tons.
Just wanted to get the PH financial advisors view on things.
hyperblue said:
I don’t get these threads… would you like 1.53% return on some cash or 3 or 4 times more by stuffing it into a savings account?
Me neither. I’m furiously saving to be able to pay the mortgage off when the current term ends. Not one penny is going against the mortgage itself - it’s all earning at least 5.1%I’m already getting more £s in savings interest each month than I’m paying out in £s on mortgage interest. Big win!
Savings is the obvious answer.
Although take into account your earnings with the £500/£1k tax free interest allowance (annything outside ann ISA) and if you are currently earning interest on current savings.
Also any High Income Child Benefit Charge (if you or your partner are earning over £50k Pa gross) that you would need to add the interest earned to (ANY interest! Except ISA interest).
Personally I’ve £42k maturing from a one year fixed saver next month with my 1.59% £42k mortgage finishing next May so I’m sticking the £42k in Premium Bonds for 5 draws, I also have to pay a 2% redemption cost if I paid the mortgage off next month so it works out I’d save ~£500 (redemption minus mortgage interest paid) plus premium bonds winnings in that time period if I leave it until May.
Although take into account your earnings with the £500/£1k tax free interest allowance (annything outside ann ISA) and if you are currently earning interest on current savings.
Also any High Income Child Benefit Charge (if you or your partner are earning over £50k Pa gross) that you would need to add the interest earned to (ANY interest! Except ISA interest).
Personally I’ve £42k maturing from a one year fixed saver next month with my 1.59% £42k mortgage finishing next May so I’m sticking the £42k in Premium Bonds for 5 draws, I also have to pay a 2% redemption cost if I paid the mortgage off next month so it works out I’d save ~£500 (redemption minus mortgage interest paid) plus premium bonds winnings in that time period if I leave it until May.
PositronicRay said:
hyperblue said:
I don’t get these threads… would you like 1.53% return on some cash or 3 or 4 times more by stuffing it into a savings account?
Financially sensible, but physiologically nice to chip away ar debt.PositronicRay said:
Financially sensible, but physiologically nice to chip away ar debt.
This, my mortgage is currently at 2.84% but I still overpay by the maximum 10% per year. I just want the f
ker gone now, bored of having to worry about interest rates and having to reorganise the mortgage every 2 or 5 years.To put numbers to it:
£6,000 * 1.0153 * 1.0153 = £6185 saved if overpaid in to mortgage on day 1
£6,000 * 1.059 * 1.059 = £6,729 saved if put in a 2 year fixed product (ignores tax)
Difference = £544
If this is right then it is £544 better off using a savings account. Whether that is worth it vs hassle, admin or any other downside is up to OP
5.9% was from Vanquis Bank (lifted from moneyfactscompare - assumed interest compounds)
£6,000 * 1.0153 * 1.0153 = £6185 saved if overpaid in to mortgage on day 1
£6,000 * 1.059 * 1.059 = £6,729 saved if put in a 2 year fixed product (ignores tax)
Difference = £544
If this is right then it is £544 better off using a savings account. Whether that is worth it vs hassle, admin or any other downside is up to OP
5.9% was from Vanquis Bank (lifted from moneyfactscompare - assumed interest compounds)
PeteinSQ said:
That's not correct. Once you've paid off part of the mortgage today you no longer pay interest on that part of the principle, and that saved interest actually compounds. So you do actually benefit from paying incrementally rather than in annual or five year lumps.
When the rate you can earn on savings is no better than the mortgage rate, yes. But clearly that's not the case for the post I was replying to or the OP.Gassing Station | Finance | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff



