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The Very Basic Guide to Home loan
Refinancing
your
home loan can bring you substantial benefits. Work
out whether it serves your needs.
"Refinancing" lets you change your
home loan to suit your changed needs and better
opportunities. As home loans have added extra features, more
and more people have decided there's another product that would
better suit their needs. (And services like eChoice make it
even easier to arrange a refinance.)
How refinance works
You
take out a new loan, and use some or all of the
funds to pay out your existing loan. The new loan often comes
from a different
lender, but many people refinance
with the same lender who they've been using for
years.
If you move to a new lender, that lender will take care of the
process of paying out your existing loan.
Why you'd refinance
Most people
refinance for one of the following
reasons:
You want to renovate
your home
You want to pay off
debts quicker and cheaper by rolling them into your home
loan
You want to get a cheaper
rate, even if it means giving up a few loan features
You want to raise
cash for a purchase
You have money earning interest and you want a home loan that
will apply that money to your loan - an "all-in-one"
account
You are currently paying a high interest rate - for instance,
if you arranged a low-start, rising-rate loan from your
homebuilder
You want to switch from
a fixed rate to a variable rate, perhaps because you can
accept the risk of higher repayments
You want to switch from
a variable rate to a fixed rate, perhaps because you
need the certainty that your repayments will stay the same for
the next three years
How to approach refinance
You should start your refinancing with clear goals, whether
they be to cut your
repayments, free up cash or improve your home.
Experienced loan brokers say that many refinance troubles start
with borrowers who are refinancing without knowing why they're
doing it.
Know the Costs of Refinancing
Application fees,
stamp duties, discharge fees and
mortgage insurance are just some of the costs you
need to understand as you
refinance.
Refinance almost always costs you money at the start - normally
more than $1000 and often more than $3000. You will pay
for:
Mortgage insurance, usually payable when you borrow more than
80 per cent of the value of your property. Mortgage insurance
will often cost more than one per cent of your property value.
And it doesn't insure you - it insures lenders against the risk
that your may not be able to repay your loan.
Application, documentation, settlement and handling fees,
charged by most lenders. These can reach $800.
Early repayment fees, often charged if you repay your loan
before it was due to finish. These vary widely according to
lender.
Valuation fees still charged by some lenders. These have often
reached $200.
Discharge fees on your existing mortgage (around $50-$200).
Registration fees on your new mortgage (around $50-$100).
In some circumstances, state governments will charge stamp duty
on your new mortgage . This will add around $50-$100 to your
refinance bill in Victoria, NSW, Tasmania, WA and
SA.
Many borrowers pay an invisible cost for refinancing - the
extra interest which they pay for taking longer to pay off
their loan. For most people, most of the time, the cheapest
loan is the one you pay off fastest.
The Right Ways to Refinance
Here’s how to make sure refinancing leaves you better off – and
a list of traps to avoid.
Pay off debts quicker and cheaper by rolling them into your
home loan
Right way
Make sure your new
loan repayments get your loan paid off as quickly -
or even faster - than the previous smaller home loan
did.
Wrong way
Roll smaller debts into your
home loan, but extend the
term of your home loan - so that you are effectively
paying interest on small debts over 30 years, instead of the
previous one or two.
Create an "all-in-one" loan that lets you apply all your spare
money to repayments
Right way
Have your
lender do the
calculations that show you'll come out ahead -
usually because you have $10,000 or more sitting in your bank
account.
Wrong way
Jump into an all-in-one loan that actually costs you money
because you pay higher interest than you would on a
basic,
no-frills loan.
Change from fixed to variable rate, or
vice-versa
Right way
Decide how much financial uncertainty you can stand, knowing
that fixed rates tend to be slightly higher on average and that
switching loans has a cost.
Wrong way
Switch from
variable to
fixed or
fixed to
variable because that type of rate is falling
fastest at the moment - then wonder why you did it when rates
change again.
Raise money to buy a car, finance a business, take a holiday or
achieve some other goal
Right way
Identify how much you need, and set a repayment schedule that
will pay off the larger loan in the minimum of extra
time.
Wrong way
Borrow more than you need and end up facing repayments you
cannot afford - leaving you on a downward spiral and needing to
refinance again.
Get a cheaper rate
Right way
Move to a loan with fewer fancy features such as "
offset", but which still allows you to make extra
repayments and redraw later.
Wrong way
Change to an identical product from another lender just to save
0.1 per cent on your loan, so that you're actually worse off
after accounting for fees and charges.
Save money
Right way
Keep your
home loan at less than 80 per cent of your home's
conservative value, to avoid costly mortgage
insurance.
Wrong way
Do a refinance deal wthat gives you relatively little benefit
but pushes your loan value above 80 per cent of your home's
value - so that you pay $1000 or more for
lender's
17 Sep 2008
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Source: http://www.refinance-database.com
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