Suppose you have a 20 year mortgage on a 5 year term. When the 5 years is up, you should have 15 years left on your mortgage. Can you re-apply so the new mortgage is 20 years instead of 15 years?
I think the standard are 30 year or 15 year mortgages. Are you talking about an30 year mortgage with a 5 year adjustment of the interest (ARM)? I know the first few years is just paying mostly interest so I am not sure you have knocked down much principal after 5 years. You can always refinance to another 30 year mortgage and run an amortization schedule to pay down your mortgage faster to in essence a 20 year mortgage..
Suppose you have a 20 year mortgage on a 5 year term. When the 5 years is up, you should have 15 years left on your mortgage. Can you re-apply so the new mortgage is 20 years instead of 15 years?
Moved to OT
Fern
Super Moderator
Sure, you could always refinance if you wanted to. Usually people refinance to reduce the interest rate, but there's no reason you couldn't refinance from a 20yr to a 30yr, likely lowering your payment even if interest rates were higher than the initial mortgage.I was thinking about the housing market crash. The interest rates went up and people freaked the hell out. If you can no longer afford the payments on your 20 year mortgage, then maybe it could be stepped up to 30 years to make it possible to pay the bills.
You can refinance if you want as mentioned. I don't think there's a fee but I guess this could depend on the bank. I think in most cases the fee is if you refinance within the 5 year term, so it's like breaking the contract basically.
What exactly do you mean a 20 year mortgage with a 5 year term? Is it an ARM?
That's called an ARM and not all loans are the same.Interest rates are set in short terms like 1, 3, 5 years. After 5 years they look at the market and your credit to offer different rates. My brother's mortgage has 5 years that are below prime. What happens after that is unknown.
ugh.. man that is terrible.I think he's Canadian, but most of the responses are based on US mortgages.
Canada has no concept of a 30 year fixed rate mortgage--after five years the rate will change. Most loans also have a pre-payment penalty, so refinancing is undesirable.