Let’s focus on Meiling’s buying process in more detail. She has found a house she likes, and her offer of £141,500 has been accepted. After allowing for other upfront costs, she can afford to put down a sizeable £41,500 as a deposit, which means she needs a mortgage loan of £100,000. She has shopped around and is undecided between these two repayment-mortgage options:
Based on the APR, Mortgage 2 is a bit cheaper (3.70% APR is lower than 4.16%), but Meiling is also interested in her monthly cash flow and wants to know what her monthly repayments would be with the second mortgage. You will now use a Mortgage calculator provided with this course to work this out. Activity 8 takes you through the steps.
Allow about 15 minutes
Open the Mortgage calculator.
To run this calculator, you need a version of Microsoft Excel or its equivalent.
The figures you enter in the calculator should be as shown in Table 1.
| Amount to borrow | 100,000.00 |
| Terms (years) | 25 |
| Interest rate (APR) | 3.70% |
The answers in the Mortgage calculator should look like Table 2. You need to select the monthly payments for the repayment mortgage, which is £508.09.
| Monthly payments | Total repaid | |
|---|---|---|
| Repayment mortgage | 508.09 | 152,427.88 |
| Interest-only mortgage | 303.22 | 190,967.46 |
An advantage of Mortgage 2 is that it is cheaper than Mortgage 1. You already know this because its APR is lower than that for Mortgage 1. You can also see that the total repaid is lower for Mortgage 2 (£152,427.88) than for Mortgage 1 (£158,419.68).
A disadvantage of Mortgage 2 is that the monthly payments, which are assumed to be constant throughout at £508.09, are much higher in the first two years than the early payments for the discounted-rate mortgage (assumed to be constant at £406.00 throughout the discount period). If Meiling’s budget is stretched in the first couple of years, she might prefer the discounted-rate mortgage even though it is more expensive overall, especially if she plans to switch to another mortgage lender after the end of the discount period (as borrowers commonly do).
OpenLearn - Rent or buy? The challenge of access to housing
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