Dick Swiveller
Well-known member
- Sep 9, 2011
- 9,539
It is unlikely you can overpay on a fixed mortgage. But regardless, by over paying you are paying off the capital rather than the interest which a lot of your monthly payments go towards on a repayment mortgage. Less capital means less capital to pay interest on. Although you pay a set amount per month over the term of the mortgage (assuming no change in interest rates), the amount that goes towards paying interest and the amount the goes towards paying off the capital shifts over time. At the start, you are paying interest on the whole amount of your loan and towards the end, you are paying a lot less interest so pay more off the capital. That is why your amount to repay goes down slower at the start and quicker at the end. The amount of interest you pay each month is calculated on the amount you have left to pay. The smaller that amount, the less interest so the more of your monthly payment goes towards paying off the capital.I'm a bit of a THICKO so apologies if my question is a stupid one but can you explain that to me? my rate is fixed for 10 years. No matter how much I overpay now, I won't see a monthly benefit unless I remortgage?
That's my understanding, anyway. As I say, I am no expert.