pay off mortgage before retiring

By: Michele Lerner for Realtor.com

For most of your life, preparing for retirement means investing. But as the actual date approaches, you also will need to streamline your budget so your expenses will be as low as possible. If a mortgage payment is your biggest monthly expense, as it is for most people, you might want to try to pay off your mortgage before you retire.

Loan balances for those borrowers also rose, with the median amount rising to $79,000 from $43,400 during those years after adjusting for inflation.

While not everyone can manage it, many older homeowners prefer to pay off their mortgage balance entirely before they retire.

Keep in mind that some expenses of homeownership won’t disappear: you still need to pay for homeowners insurance and property taxes—and if you live in a condo or a home within a homeowners association, you’ll need to keep paying your association dues.

However, eliminating the bulk of your payment, the mortgage principal and interest, can go a long way to smoother cash flow once you stop work.

Ways to Pay Off Your Mortgage

The best way to pay down your home loan depends on your loan terms, balance and budget. In particular, you need to consider your monthly budget and whether you can afford to make larger payments to reduce your mortgage balance.

It’s particularly important to think about how long you plan to keep your home and how far you are into your mortgage.

Refinance

If you’ve been paying off a 30-year fixed-rate loan for 15 or 20 years, you should think carefully about the advantages and disadvantages of refinancing.

In some cases, it’s a smart move to refinance into a shorter term loan of 10 years or even less, but be aware of the transaction fees and closing costs associated with a refinance—typically 2% to 3% of the loan amount. You may be better off applying those closing costs to extra payments on your current loan, especially if you’re near the payoff date.

Early in any home loan repayment you’re mostly paying interest, but by the last few years of your loan, you’re paying mostly principal. If you have refinanced before or bought your home within the last few years, refinancing into a shorter loan term could cause a big jump in your payments.

If you do opt to refinance into a shorter loan, be sure you can comfortably afford the higher payments and that you’ll recoup your costs quickly.

Prepay your loan

Refinancing locks you into a new payment plan, but if you’d rather have some flexibility, you can make extra payments to eliminate your mortgage faster.

You may want to add money to every payment, make an extra payment each year or even make a lump sum payment if you receive a tax refund or bonus.

Not only will you pay off your loan faster, but you’ll save thousands in interest payments.

For example, if you took out a $200,000 loan in 1999 at 4.5%, your principal and interest payments are about $836 per month—and your loan payoff date is 2029.

If you add $250 per month to your payment, you can eliminate your loan in 2025 and save about $13,630 in interest. If you can manage $500 more per month, you can save $21,300 in interest and be mortgage-free in 2023.

Put Mortgage Payoff Decisions in Context

It’s important to consider any decision about your home loan in the context of your other financial goals and commitments. Be sure you are contributing as much as you should to your retirement funds and eliminate non tax-deductible debt before you begin to pay down your mortgage.

Consult a lender and a financial planner to discuss your options on an individual basis.

This story was originally posted on SeniorHousingNet.