A borrower who is
looking for a new mortgage should always select a
traditional mortgage. If you were to take two
loans that are the same in all respects with the
exception that one is simple interest you will pay
more interest on the simple interest mortgage unless
you make your monthly payment exactly on the date
that it is due.
The difference
between a standard mortgage and a simple interest
mortgage is that interest is calculated monthly on a
standard mortgage and daily on the simple interest
mortgage.
In order to
illustrate this example lets use a 30-year loan for
$100,000 with a rate of 6%. The monthly payment
would be $599.56 for both the standard and simple
interest mortgages. The interest due is calculated
differently, however.
On the standard
mortgage, the 6% is divided by 12, converting it to
a monthly rate of .5%. The monthly rate is
multiplied by the loan balance at the end of the
preceding month to obtain the interest due for the
month. In the first month, it is $500.
On the simple
interest version, the annual rate of 6% is divided
by 365, converting it to a daily rate of .016438%.
The daily rate is multiplied by the loan balance to
obtain the interest due for the day. The first day
and each day thereafter until the first payment is
made, it is $16.44.
The $16.44 is
recorded in a special accrual account, which
increases by that amount every day. No interest
accrues on this account. When a payment is received,
it is applied first to the accrual account, and what
is left over, is used to reduce the balance.
When the balance declines, a new and smaller daily
interest charge is calculated.
How does this work
out for the borrower? We know that a standard
30-year mortgage pays off in 30 years. Beginning
January 1, 2004, this amounts to 10,958 days. On a
loan of $100,000 and an interest rate of 6%, total
interest payments amount to $115,832.
On the simple
interest version of the same mortgage, assuming you
pay on the first day of every month, you pay off in
10,990 days, or 41 days later than with the standard
mortgage. Total interest payments are $116,167 or
$335 more.
These are small
differences, due largely to leap years. Over the 30
years beginning 2004, there are 8 years with 366
days, and the lender collects interest for those
days. Leap years do not affect total interest
payments on a standard mortgage.
The disadvantage of
a simple interest mortgage rises with the interest
rate. At 12%, and continuing to assume payment on
the first day of every month, it pays off in 11,049
days or 91 days later than the standard mortgage.
Total interest is $3082 higher.
But the borrowers
who really get clobbered by the simple interest
mortgage are those who pay late. The standard
mortgage has a grace period within which borrowers
can pay without penalty. On a simple interest
mortgage, in contrast, borrowers pay interest for
every day they are late.
Suppose the borrower
pays on the 10th day of every month, for
example. With a standard mortgage, he gets a free
ride because of the grace period. With a simple
interest mortgage at 6%, he pays off 101 days later
than the standard mortgage and pays $1328 more
interest. At 12%, he pays off 466 days later and
pays $15,137 more interest.
Penalties for
payment after the grace period work the same
way on both types of mortgage. For this reason, I
have not included penalties in the calculations.
Borrowers making
extra payments also do better with a standard
mortgage. Most lenders will credit extra payments
received within the first 20-25 days of the month
against the balance at the end of the preceding
month. A borrower who pays $1,000 extra on day 20,
for example, will save the interest on that $1,000
for 20 days. With a simple interest mortgage, in
contrast, interest accrues for those 20 days.
The only transaction
that works out better for the borrower with a simple
interest mortgage is monthly payments made early.
If every month you pay 10 days before the payment is
due, for example, you pay off 40 days sooner than
the standard mortgage at 6%, and 254 days earlier at
12%. There is no benefit to early payment on a
standard mortgage, since it is credited on the due
date, just like a payment that is received 10 days
late.
Bottom line: other
things the same, take the standard mortgage. But if
you are stuck with a simple interest mortgage, make
it a habit to pay early; it will pay big dividends.