LuluLovesDisney
<font color=red>If you're not outraged, you're not
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2005
- Messages
- 5,274
I am buying a condo for the first time and I am learning a lot as I go. I have 3 mortgage options:
bank- low app fee, 5 year fixed at 4% then adjustable, no more than 2% increase per year, max cap of 10%
broker- very high app fee, 5 year fixed at 3.75%, then adjustable, no more than 2% increase per year, max cap of 10%
broker fixed- same high app fee, 30 year fixed at 5.25%
Also both broker options require our insurance and taxes to be held in escrow instead of paid directly to ins. company/city tax dept.
Well, I know a fixed is more secure than an ARM but it is a small place (2 bedroom) and we are using it to build equity. In other words, we are using it to build equity but it is too small once we have kids, so in 4-7 years we will be ready to move on to a bigger house. I still think it is a much better idea to buy this place than continue to pay rent.
So, if I am only planning on being here 4-7 years max and we could def. afford the mortgage (I qualify for double what the condo costs, we are debt free, our rent is significantly higher than the est. mortgage payment, actually rent + cost of offsite storage unit = a bit higher than mortgage+insurance+taxes) is the ARM still a bad idea if it is a lower insterest rate? I am hoping with a lower interest rate we could make double our monthly payments and build our equity really fast. Then, we need to decide if we want to put as much as possible into equity or if we want to build our savings more, but that's for another day.
Thanks again!
bank- low app fee, 5 year fixed at 4% then adjustable, no more than 2% increase per year, max cap of 10%
broker- very high app fee, 5 year fixed at 3.75%, then adjustable, no more than 2% increase per year, max cap of 10%
broker fixed- same high app fee, 30 year fixed at 5.25%
Also both broker options require our insurance and taxes to be held in escrow instead of paid directly to ins. company/city tax dept.
Well, I know a fixed is more secure than an ARM but it is a small place (2 bedroom) and we are using it to build equity. In other words, we are using it to build equity but it is too small once we have kids, so in 4-7 years we will be ready to move on to a bigger house. I still think it is a much better idea to buy this place than continue to pay rent.
So, if I am only planning on being here 4-7 years max and we could def. afford the mortgage (I qualify for double what the condo costs, we are debt free, our rent is significantly higher than the est. mortgage payment, actually rent + cost of offsite storage unit = a bit higher than mortgage+insurance+taxes) is the ARM still a bad idea if it is a lower insterest rate? I am hoping with a lower interest rate we could make double our monthly payments and build our equity really fast. Then, we need to decide if we want to put as much as possible into equity or if we want to build our savings more, but that's for another day.
Thanks again!
