Can I move my current mortgage to the new house? episode artwork

EPISODE · Dec 11, 2020 · 7 MIN

Can I move my current mortgage to the new house?

from Mortgagenomics Canada

One of the consequences of selling a home is the unexpected penalty that arises as a result of breaking your mortgage contract ahead of its maturity date. The penalty is determined by the greater of 3 months interest, or the dreaded interest rate differential (IRD). And the scary part is the your penalty can radically change from the day you list your property for sale to the day you sell it, especially in a whacky environment like we are currently in with the recent free fall in interest rates.  One way to avoid a break penalty is by porting your mortgage to your new home purchase.HERE's HOW A MORTGAGE PORT/TRANSFER WORKS:There are three (3) Porting options:Straight Port (when you transfer precisely the same mortgage balance to the new property)Port and Increase (when you transfer the mortgage and increase the principle balance) Port and Decrease (when you transfer the mortgage and reduce the principle balance)**depending on the lender, applicants have 30 to 180 days from the sale of their current home to close on their new homePorting a mortgage is subject to the following:porting fees: $75 to $400 depending on the lendera break penalty is actually charged as the initial mortgage needs to (technically) discharge itself off the current land titlethe break penalty (or part of it) is then reimbursed upon advance of the newly ported mortgagesome lenders will waive break penalties (fully or partially) if the closing dates of both properties are the same dayPenalty Reimbursements are as follows:Straight Port - reimbursed in fullPort & Increase - reimbursed in fullPort & Decrease - partial reimbursement [(New Money/Old Money) * Penalty]Impact On Rates:Straight Port - interest rate remains the samePort & IncreaseFixed - weighted average blend Variable - greater of prevailing market rates or your current ratePort & Decrease - interest rate remains the sameImpact to Amortization & Term:in all cases the remaining amortization on the new ported mortgage will remain the same as the remaining amortization on the existing mortgagein all cases the term of the new ported mortgage must be equal to or longer than the remaining term on the existing mortgageThat’s all I got. Check in next week for more.Marko Gelo Garage Band Sessions: (produced and performed my Marko)"Cheap Money" ...intro song (0:41) <-Marko Gelo"chronicles" ...outro song (1:53) <- Marko GeloSound Effects provided from Zapsplat.com and Apple LoopsContact Marko, he's a Mortgage Broker:604-800-9593 direct Vancouver403-606-3751 direct Calgarymarkogelo.comFacebook@markogelo (Twitter)MarkoMusic (SoundCloud Account)...all podcast music tracks are performed and produced by Marko Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

One of the consequences of selling a home is the unexpected penalty that arises as a result of breaking your mortgage contract ahead of its maturity date. The penalty is determined by the greater of 3 months interest, or the dreaded interest rate differential (IRD). And the scary part is the your penalty can radically change from the day you list your property for sale to the day you sell it, especially in a whacky environment like we are currently in with the recent free fall in interest rates.  One way to avoid a break penalty is by porting your mortgage to your new home purchase.HERE's HOW A MORTGAGE PORT/TRANSFER WORKS:There are three (3) Porting options:Straight Port (when you transfer precisely the same mortgage balance to the new property)Port and Increase (when you transfer the mortgage and increase the principle balance) Port and Decrease (when you transfer the mortgage and reduce the principle balance)**depending on the lender, applicants have 30 to 180 days from the sale of their current home to close on their new homePorting a mortgage is subject to the following:porting fees: $75 to $400 depending on the lendera break penalty is actually charged as the initial mortgage needs to (technically) discharge itself off the current land titlethe break penalty (or part of it) is then reimbursed upon advance of the newly ported mortgagesome lenders will waive break penalties (fully or partially) if the closing dates of both properties are the same dayPenalty Reimbursements are as follows:Straight Port - reimbursed in fullPort & Increase - reimbursed in fullPort & Decrease - partial reimbursement [(New Money/Old Money) * Penalty]Impact On Rates:Straight Port - interest rate remains the samePort & IncreaseFixed - weighted average blend Variable - greater of prevailing market rates or your current ratePort & Decrease - interest rate remains the sameImpact to Amortization & Term:in all cases the remaining amortization on the new ported mortgage will remain the same as the remaining amortization on the existing mortgagein all cases the term of the new ported mortgage must be equal to or longer than the remaining term on the existing mortgageThat’s all I got. Check in next week for more.Marko Gelo Garage Band Sessions: (produced and performed my Marko)"Cheap Money" ...intro song (0:41) <-Marko Gelo"chronicles" ...outro song (1:53) <- Marko GeloSound Effects provided from Zapsplat.com and Apple LoopsContact Marko, he's a Mortgage Broker:604-800-9593 direct Vancouver403-606-3751 direct Calgarymarkogelo.comFacebook@markogelo (Twitter)MarkoMusic (SoundCloud Account)...all podcast music tracks are performed and produced by Marko Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Can I move my current mortgage to the new house?

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This episode is 7 minutes long.

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This episode was published on December 11, 2020.

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One of the consequences of selling a home is the unexpected penalty that arises as a result of breaking your mortgage contract ahead of its maturity date. The penalty is determined by the greater of 3 months interest, or the dreaded interest rate...

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