Payoff Statement

  

Categories: Credit

He’s called every hotline. He’s visited every website. He’s gone to every carnival. And now, Marty has traveled halfway around the world just to meet the world’s most powerful clairvoyant: Madame LeKismette. As he looks deep into her eyes, he tells her he only has one question: how much money would he need, right now, today, to pay off the remainder of his mortgage? He’s just come into some money and he’d really love to eliminate that big monthly expense. “Silly Marty,” Madame LeKismette says. “You did not need to come all this way. All you had to do was ask your mortgage lender for a payoff statement.”

As always, Madame LeKismette is right. If we’re planning on pulling a Marty and paying off our own mortgage or other type of loan, all we have to do is contact our lender and ask for a payoff statement. A “payoff statement” is exactly what it sounds like: it’s a statement that tells us how much money is required to pay off a loan in full at that moment. It’ll also tell us if we have to pay a fee to pay it off early, or if we’ll get any sort of rebate on the interest we’ve already paid.

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Finance: What are the components of a mo...1 Views

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Finance Allah shmoop What are the components of a mortgage

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payment All right so here's a weird thing about mortgages

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When you borrow say four hundred grand buy a home

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and say in a six percent fixed thirty year interest

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you'll end up paying way more than the four hundred

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grand just in interest Renting the money Think about it

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Well you'll have a monthly pay payment of twenty four

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hundred bucks and by the time you've made thirty times

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twelve per year or three hundred sixty payments you'll have

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paid some four hundred sixty three thousand dollars in interest

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charges Seems like a lot of money to pay out

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of your own pocket But since mortgage interest is usually

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entirely tax deductible well the rial cost to most home

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borrowers is actually meaningful E less than that six percent

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interest maybe something closer to a three and a half

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four percent something like that So while yes on a

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total gross basis you will have paid out more than

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the amount borrowed over the thirty year course in the

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mortgage you'll also have been forgiven loads of taxes And

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for what it's worth over most thirty year time periods

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in history the market has gone up about eight to

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ten percent a year on average Compound did something like

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that So you feel the people mover floor moving fast

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underfoot with inflation pushing things around as you go along

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Well the money you borrow is the principal of the

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loan and that number usually declines by a small amount

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each month As you make a flat payment and it's

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usually gradually paid off Check out what the principal of

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four hundred grand looks like for the first twelve months

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of payments right here Note that the flat monthly payment

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is twenty four hundred dollars and see how the principal

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payed as part of this payment loan thing there goes

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from paydown of three hundred ninety eight dollars Teo Well

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four hundred twenty a year later right Like you're paying

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off principal little by little So you have less that's

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attributed to interest And Mohr that's attributed to principal pay

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down as you go along and note that this assumes

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Ah flat monthly payment here Right You're paying the same

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amount You're one you would You're thirty two thousand three

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hundred ninety eight dollars and twenty cents on this particular

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alone So after a year the amount owed an interest

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is well just slightly last Here in this example it's

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one thousand nine hundred seventy seven bucks down from in

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a two grand and note what it looks like at

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the end of each of the first five years That's

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a big shift from almost entirely interest do now Principal

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being ah meaningful part of it you got after ten

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years right here and then at the halfway point in

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fifteen years it's here So I noticed that the amount

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owed at this point is roughly half the total Why

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Because the lion share the pay down went to interest

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in the first half of the life of the mortgage

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AII those first fifteen years and well then in the

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back half way more will be attributed to a principal

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pay down than to interest Like check out what the

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very last month's payment looks like It's just twelve dollars

02:47

of interest and two thousand three hundred eighty six dollars

02:50

of principle All of this is principal until well then

02:53

the balance is zero and we'll finally Then you will

02:56

have fully paid off your mortgage and own your home

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