Biweekly Mortgages
Your lender will
probably tell you that a biweekly mortgage is structured just
like a traditional fixed-rate, level-payment, fully amortizing
mortgage. However, you make your payments every 14 days instead
of once a month. The monthly payment is split in half, resulting
in the same total monthly mortgage, but the resulting 26 and
sometimes 27 biweekly payments a year translate into 13 monthly
payments, or one extra monthly payment per year.
Borrowers can qualify for a 30-year monthly payment amount, but
get a loan that pays off in approximately 22 years at current
interest rates. At higher rates, the actual term declines.
If you are looking to build up equity in your home faster
without the higher mortgage payments that come with a
shorter-term mortgage, you may want to consider the biweekly
mortgage. Payments can be deducted from your bank account and
scheduled to coincide with your payroll deposits to simplify
budgeting. Lenders may charge an initial set-up fee to
automatically debit your checking account
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