Mortgage loans also vary by whether they are fixed interest rate mortgages or adjustable interest rate mortgage loans, also called ARMs. The adjustable interest rate mortgages may have a fixed component and an adjustable rate component. An example is the 5/1 ARM loan. There is no such thing as “one size fits all” when it comes to a mortgage loan. Some borrowers may prefer a longer-term mortgage with lower payments, and some a shorter-term mortgage with higher payments–both depending on their income and individual goals. Some will prefer a fixed rate mortgage so they always know what their mortgage payment will be from month to month. Others may prefer an adjustable rate mortgage with a fixed component at first, since their income may be lower in the early years of the mortgage and higher in later years when the payment could spike up. The 20-year mortgage loan, with a term and an interest rate lying somewhere between other types of mortgage loans, might be preferable to some people. Here is a comparison of some of the more common mortgage loans to the 20-year mortgage loan. Calculating the principal and interest payments on a mortgage is amortization. If you buy a house using a 30-year fixed rate mortgage loan that costs $220,000, your monthly payments will be $1,215, and the total interest cost over the 30-year term will be $217,345 if the interest rate is 5.25%. The advantages of this type of mortgage loan are that monthly payments are lower, so it is easier for lower income individuals to qualify. A disadvantage is that it takes 30 years to pay it off, although this may not be as much a disadvantage as in the past. People don’t usually stay in the same house as long as they once did. Another disadvantage is the high total interest cost since the interest rate is the highest for the longer term loan.
15-Year Fixed Rate Mortgage Loan
The 15-year fixed rate mortgage loan usually is the shortest-term mortgage loan offered by financial institutions. It is the next most-common loan to the 30-year loan, comprising about 8% of all mortgage loans. It also usually has the lowest interest rate. Due to the short term, it has the lowest risk but the highest payments. If you borrow the same $220,000 for a house using a 15-year fixed rate mortgage loan at 4.25% interest, your payments will be $1,655 per month, and your total interest charge will be $77,902. Your payments will be $440 higher per month, but you will pay a huge $139,443 less in total interest charges over the life of the loan. Not everyone can afford an extra $440 on top of their house payment every month, and that is the disadvantage of the 15-year mortgage loan: You save so much money in total interest charges. You will also build equity more quickly in your house.
5/1 Adjustable Rate Mortgage
The 5/1 adjustable rate mortgage loan is appropriate for some homebuyers. For the first five years of the loan, the interest rate, which is usually lower than that for the 30-year mortgage, is fixed. For the remainder of the 25 years of the mortgage, the interest rate moves up and down with a mortgage index, often the U.S. Treasury Index, plus a margin. This loan is appropriate for people who are only going to stay in their home for five years or if interest rates remain low, for longer than that. It’s also sometimes the only choice for homebuyers who don’t have excellent credit.
20-Year Fixed Rate Mortgage Loans
A 20-year fixed rate mortgage loan is not as common as some of the other mortgage loans. In 2013, 20-year loans comprised less than 1% of the loans made for mortgages. If you do an amortization schedule for a 20-year loan on a house costing $220,000 at an interest rate of 4.75%, your monthly payment will be $1,422, and your total interest charges will be $121,206. Your monthly payment is right in the middle of the 15- and 30-year loans, but you get your house paid off 10 years sooner than you do with the 30-year loan, and only five years longer than with the 15-year loan. That is a clear advantage to the 20-year loan. Another advantage is that the total interest charges are not as high as you would expect them to be, compared to the interest charges on the 30-year loan. They are higher than the interest charges on the 15-year mortgage loan, but not proportionately as low as you might expect compared to the 30-year mortgage loan. An additional advantage to the 20-year fixed rate mortgage is that the payment is closer to the 30-year loan, but the time to pay off is closer to the 15-year loan. The 20-year loan is a good loan to use for refinancing. It is very expensive to refinance using a 30-year fixed rate mortgage loan because you start all over with a 30-year amortization.