Interest Only Mortgages
A mortgage is called “Interest Only” when its
monthly payment does not include the repayment
of principal for a certain period of time.
Interest Only loans are offered on fixed rate or
adjustable rate mortgages as wells as on option
ARMs. At the end of the interest only period,
the loan becomes fully amortized, thus resulting
in greatly increased monthly payments. The new
payment will be larger than it would have been
if it had been fully amortizing from the
beginning. The longer the interest only period,
the larger the new payment will be when the
interest only period ends.
You won't build equity during the
interest-only term, but it could help you close
on the home you want instead of settling for the
home you can afford.
Since you'll be qualified based on the
interest-only payment and will likely refinance
before the interest-only term expires anyway, it
could be a way to effectively lease your dream
home now and invest the principal portion of
your payment elsewhere while realizing the tax
advantages and appreciation that accompany
homeownership.
As an example, if borrow $250,000 at 6
percent, using a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage,
your monthly payment would be $1,499. On the
other hand, if you borrowed $250,000 at 6
percent, using a 30-year mortgage with a 5-year
interest only payment plan, your monthly payment
initially would be $1,250. This saves you $249
per month or $2,987 a year. However, when you
reach year six, your monthly payments will jump
to $1,611, or $361 more per month. Hopefully,
your income will have jumped accordingly to
support the higher payments or you have
refinanced your loan by that time.
Mortgages with interest only payment options
may save you money in the short-run, but they
actually cost more over the 30-year term of the
loan. However, most borrowers repay their
mortgages well before the end of the full
30-year loan term.
Borrowers with sporadic incomes can benefit
from interest-only mortgages. This is
particularly the case if the mortgage is one
that permits the borrower to pay more than
interest-only. In this case, the borrower can
pay interest-only during lean times and use
bonuses or income spurts to pay down the
principal.