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-   -   130 k mortgage (https://www.scoobynet.com/non-scooby-related-4/549966-130-k-mortgage.html)

bob r 09 October 2006 10:52 PM

130 k mortgage
 
what would the repayments be on a 130k repayment mortgage over 25 yrs.

i would ring a mortgage co but cant be arsed with the 30 minute call.:)

MattW 09 October 2006 10:53 PM

£5000 per month

You tell me your interest rate and I'll tell you mine ;)

LG John 09 October 2006 10:54 PM

Just use an online calculator :confused:

Chris L 09 October 2006 11:10 PM

Straight repayment - you'd be looking at around £850 - £900, dependng on the rate deal.

davegtt 09 October 2006 11:13 PM

Lets say at 5% and your paying £770 :)

Ayde 10 October 2006 12:50 AM

Cheap loans | mortgages | credit cards | home & car insurance - moneysupermarket UK saves alot of hassle;)

WR1 Ant 10 October 2006 08:37 AM

On a tracker my new 22 year £176700 mortgage is £1050 per month so I would guess approx £750 ish over 25 years.

Fat Boy 10 October 2006 07:53 PM

Quick rough guide is as follows:

Divide the amount in half i.e. £130k / 2 = £65,000 ( = average balance over life of mortgage)
Multiply by the int rate - say 5%- £65,000X 5% = £3,250.
Multiply that by number of years i.e. 25 X £3250 = £81,250 - that's roughly the interest you will pay over the life of the mortgage.
Add that back to the original mortage amount i.e. £130K + £81.25K=£211.25K - that's the total you will repay.
Divide by no of years i.e. 25 = £8.45K p.a. or by no of repayments - 25 years X 12 monthly repayments = 300repayments (£211.25K/300) = £704.17 per month).

HTH

Robin Mullan 10 October 2006 07:58 PM

Jesus man. Im guessing that your a mortgage or financial advisor. :wonder:

john banks 10 October 2006 09:07 PM

Neither the mean or median balance over the life of the mortgage will be half the loan value unless you pay 0% interest.

The correct calculation is:

i=interest rate%/1200 = 5/1200=0.004167 (1200 to convert to fraction and from annual to monthly)
x=(1+i)^300=1.004167^300=3.482 (300 being the number of months in 25 years)
Payment=i*loan*x/(x-1)=0.004167*130000*3.482/2.482=£760

Or if you didn't pay attention in maths, use an internet calculator :rolleyes:

slagmagnet69 10 October 2006 09:22 PM


Originally Posted by bob r
what would the repayments be on a 130k repayment mortgage over 25 yrs.

i would ring a mortgage co but cant be arsed with the 30 minute call.:)

What's going on here then - you wanna buy my house dont you? :thumb:


mortgageinprinciple.com - Home

Mortgage calc - click on top/centre of page.



HTH

davegtt 10 October 2006 10:16 PM


Originally Posted by john banks
Neither the mean or median balance over the life of the mortgage will be half the loan value unless you pay 0% interest.

The correct calculation is:

i=interest rate%/1200 = 5/1200=0.004167 (1200 to convert to fraction and from annual to monthly)
x=(1+i)^300=1.004167^300=3.482 (300 being the number of months in 25 years)
Payment=i*loan*x/(x-1)=0.004167*130000*3.482/2.482=£760

Or if you didn't pay attention in maths, use an internet calculator :rolleyes:

Or ignore it all together and read my post further up :rolleyes:

https://www.scoobynet.com/6241344-post5.html

bob r 10 October 2006 10:21 PM


Originally Posted by slagmagnet69
What's going on here then - you wanna buy my house dont you? :thumb:


mortgageinprinciple.com - Home

Mortgage calc - click on top/centre of page.



HTH

cheers G.:thumb:

jonc 10 October 2006 10:27 PM

Have you tried Picture Loans, I think their ads have been well received on this forum! :D

stevebennett 10 October 2006 10:39 PM

Easy rough Calculator for repayments is

130k x 2

= 260k

monthly repayment of

260k \ 300 - 300 number of months of repayments

=£866 as a ball park estimate.

You should also consider if you can be strict with your cash work out the investment income v the cost of an interest only repayment mortgage.

For instance you could with repayment being around £800 this is approx split £550 interst and £250 repayment. If you interest rate is discounted of %4.95for a fixed period of 5 years consider how much interest you could make on a 6.5% interst savigs account over the same period.

I have done the same calculations and found that over a 5 year period on our mortgage we could benifit from an extra £5000. so we would then pool all of this cash at the time if required to pay a lump sum off our portgage if the interest rates were not in our favour if they were we would then carry on investing the money.

Steve

Its a long hard calculation i can offer assistance.

john banks 10 October 2006 10:48 PM


Originally Posted by davegtt
Or ignore it all together and read my post further up :rolleyes:

https://www.scoobynet.com/6241344-post5.html

I wouldn't have bothered posting if the previous estimates weren't hugely misleading, yours excepted ;) There are too many "very" rough guides in this thread from people that don't seem to understand compound interest and how to use a simple power equation to calculate it quickly and accurately.

Although the guy maybe only wanted the actual figure, if you give him the tool to do what-if analysis with different amounts, terms and interest rates then he might be better informed?

SPEN555 10 October 2006 10:53 PM

Just go onto

Cheap loans | mortgages | credit cards | home & car insurance - moneysupermarket UK

key it in as per instructions and it will calculate it for you.

john banks 10 October 2006 10:53 PM

How rough are you wanting to be Steve?

If the interest rate is 4% or 8% the total amount payable over 25 years is 158 to 231% of the original amount. It is only near to double if the interest rate is 6.4%.

It is indeed easier to use an on line calculator, certainly than relying on the ridiculously inaccurate rules of thumb being posted in this thread.

stevebennett 10 October 2006 11:28 PM


Originally Posted by john banks
How rough are you wanting to be Steve?

If the interest rate is 4% or 8% the total amount payable over 25 years is 158 to 231% of the original amount. It is only near to double if the interest rate is 6.4%.

It is indeed easier to use an on line calculator, certainly than relying on the ridiculously inaccurate rules of thumb being posted in this thread.


True but if you are looking around houses it proves as a good estimate and guide for when an estate agent is bullsh1tting. If you have time use the BBc mortgage calculator

BBC - Homes - Property - Mortgage calculator

Some other sites offer a lifestyle calculator to show you what monthly amount you can afford and then work out you max mortgage based on your current commitments.

john banks 10 October 2006 11:37 PM


For instance you could with repayment being around £800 this is approx split £550 interst and £250 repayment. If you interest rate is discounted of %4.95for a fixed period of 5 years consider how much interest you could make on a 6.5% interst savigs account over the same period.
I was wondering about this. I'm looking for a savings account to move house proceeds to whilst I rent for a while. The best I've found that is available for a year, with sensible min/max amounts, with no fee or interest penalties for early withdrawal is 5.25%, but net this is only 3.15%, which is similar to premium bond payout rates. I can't find anything that gets anywhere near to 5% net or tax free. NS&I fixed or index linked certificates are of poor value or penalise you for early withdrawal, gilts, bonds and moneymarket stuff is either unattractive on rates or taxed. The only alternative seems to be to use a stocks and shares unit trust and use capital gains tax allowances, but that puts the capital at the mercy of the markets. Have you come across anything better for a savings return?

TopBanana 10 October 2006 11:48 PM


Originally Posted by john banks
I can't find anything that gets anywhere near to 5% net or tax free.

Interest rates are effectively zero when you take into account inflation :(

Fat Boy 11 October 2006 11:41 AM

Getting a bit anal there, Dr Banks - My rough guide is just that a rough guide, but strangely it works out to within 40 quid or so of the real cost calculated correctly. :p

Oh and I do understand how to calculate loan and interest repayments correctly after over 25 years in the finance industry, but felt that it would be complete overkill for the original poster who clearly isn't up to speed in this area...

Tidgy 11 October 2006 11:43 AM

100k was £550 odd a month when i looked so work it out from that ;)

bear in mind it varies from comapny to company and person to person

Nat 11 October 2006 12:04 PM

Loan Calculator

^ Is a very helpful webpage with calulators for loans/mortgages, pay, tax, car tax, iht , profit margins, break even, VAT and more.

briforbes 11 October 2006 12:08 PM

Using Alliance & Leicester's 2 year tracker deal as an example, at a rate of 4.39%....

130k over 25 years would cost you £714.49 for the first two years, after which you would remortgage, without penalty, to a better deal.

Nat 11 October 2006 12:10 PM


Originally Posted by briforbes
Using Alliance & Leicester's 2 year tracker deal as an example, at a rate of 4.39%....

130k over 25 years would cost you £714.49 for the first two years, after which you would remortgage, without penalty, to a better deal.

During in which time the BOEBR could go up by say 1.5% which would mean you would be paying a lot more don't forget....

davegtt 11 October 2006 12:11 PM

Good point Nat, although Im not sure I see a 1.5% rise in the next 2 years. Not that it can't happen and not that there wont be any rises at all, still a fair point to make :)

Nat 11 October 2006 12:15 PM

Yeah, i'd always plan for the worst though (1.5 being that imo) and make sure i could afford it if that did happen.

When i got my first property Four/five years ago it was with just such a deal (although i only had a 70% mortgage on a 100K property) with the halifax - 2 years tracker at +0.4. Started at the BOEBR being 4% and it went down nicely to 3.25% i think. (or it might have started at 4.5 and gone down to 3.75...can't remember!) Then got a fixed rate as could see it was only going to go up from there.

jaytc2003 11 October 2006 12:37 PM

I am going to be paying approx £920 per month on a 150k over 25 years. I dont know what the interest rate is but I know that is the approx figure (give or take a few pounds) this has been sorted out within the last week so is fairly upto date. This is with GE money

MattN 11 October 2006 01:08 PM

just use PMT function in excel


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