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Posts Tagged ‘consolidation

Mississauga – Pay off high interest debts

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If you are already a home owner, you will likely have equity in your home.  Using that equity to pay off your consumer debts may be an option that will ease some of the stress of paying high interest debts over a long term.  Instead of paying your credit card debts at 18 – 28% interest, you may be able to consolidate that debt into your mortgage and pay it off at less than 6%.

 

Current Debt Position

Balance

Monthly Payment

1st Mortgage at 5.7 %  (amortization 19 years)

$220,000.00

$1,573.78

2nd Mortgage at 14%

$40,000.00

$469.55

Car Loan and Credit Cards

$18,857.00

$915.71

Total

Mortgages + Car Loan + Credit Cards

 

$278,857.00

 

$2,959.04

 

 

 

New Debt Position

Balance

Payment

New Mortgage at 5.25% (amortization 19 years)

*$278,857.00

$1,926.60

2nd Mortgage at 14% 

$0.00

$0.00

Car Loan and Credit Cards

$0.00

$0.00

Total

Mortgage + Car Loan + Credit Cards

 

$278,857.00

 

$1.926.60

Total Monthly Saving:  $2,959.04 – $1,926.60 =

$1,032.44

 

*CMHC insurance fees and cancellation penalties may apply.  This example is illustrative only.

Interest rates are subject to change without notice.   

 

Consider above, a recent client with a mortgage balance of $220,000, a second mortgage at $40,000 and other debts totalling $18,857.  By consolidating the two mortgages, the car loan and the high interest credit cards, the client was able to reduce monthly payments and save $1,032.44 per month.  It is important to note that for this exercise to bear real financial fruit, this monthly saving should be applied to either an investment or as additional principal payments against the new mortgage.  All too often, the additional cash flow is consumed resulting in a similar crisis a few years down the road.

 

Such a consolidation will not only reduce monthly debt load but will improve and protect your credit rating, a major consideration for any Canadian seeking future loans.  Missed or late payments are not the only factors that can reduce your credit rating in the eyes of financial institutions, credit cards and lines of credit that are “maxed out” have the same negative impact.  You should always know, validate and protect your credit rating as much as your SIN number and credit cards.   When it comes time to renew your mortgage finance, you will be glad you kept your credit rating in good standing.

 

 

This blog was written by Elizabeth Blair, a Licensed Mortgage Agent with Mortgage Edge in Richmond Hill, Ontario.  Elizabeth services mortgage clients in Mississauga and all over the Greater Toronto area.

 

You can contact Elizabeth directly by phone at (905) 510-5785,  by email at eblair@mortgageedge.ca  or you visit her website at:    www.missmortgage.ca 

 

Elizabeth is licensed with the Financial Services Commission of Ontario and is also a Member of IMBA (the Independent Mortgage Brokers Association of Ontario) http://www.imba.ca