This is a willy waving thread of top proportions.
62 most likely. Reserved our house. But it won't be built till September2018!
42, 9 years ago. Always lived alone so it was a priority to get it paid off as no second income to fall back on.
wrightyson: This is a willy waving thread of top proportions.
It is indeed. And mine will be paid off when me and the wife are 70.
Which means I win. Hooray. I win the willy waving thread.
I've got that right haven't I.... 😉
**** paying off the mortgage. Mrs ws and I plus the kids now are partying hard still and paying off the mortgage as the contract requires. Bollox to overpaying and suffering now whilst we can still enjoy going out and doing/buying what we want when we want etc.
paid off at the start of this month 😀
aged 48
people who've paid it off, or are likely to pay it off early are more likely to be over represented on it to be fair.This is a willy waving thread of top proportions.
Depends on the value of the house surely in the willy waving stakes ? A fully paid up 1.5M would be quite something.
Why do people feel compelled to tell other random strangers this piece of useless information?
Does it matter? Everyones circumstances are different, if someone has a mortgage till their 100 so what, that on its own is meaningless.
Go watch Strictly ffs.
I dunno, but I did buy a new bike today so I is happy!!
I think given the astronomical house/income ratio if you drop out it can be very hard to get back on again.
Always worth keeping the arrangement in place as it’s a v cheap way to borrow
57 but our mortgage is for 80% of the house, not sure when we'll manage to get the other 20%. Maybe when the mil pops her clogs she'll leave us enough to buy the rest out.
I've got 22 years left (am 44 now) so 66 - the year before I retire!
We plan to overpay a little bit once the childcare costs drop, so hoping to get it down to nearer 60 eventually.
Nobody is going to be leaving us any money so down to us to pay it off.
Not bothered about it really - as even though it is loads of money (£1300 PCM) it is still considerably cheaper than renting where we've chosen to live.
If it all goes wrong we've got enough equity in our house to buy outright a bit further away from London.
Probably about 20% true 'brags' too 🙂
I think its interesting. Perhaps all the skint whiners could FO to another thread to whine?
I'll be 59 when ours is paid off. 16 years left to go. Only got the mortgage 3 years ago. Was a 30 year term initially. After 2 years the LTV was that good we dropped it to 17 years for £90 a month more. Hopefully able to drop the term once we don't have to pay nursery fees. Mid 50s paid off is my plan.
3 weeks ago, at 57. It felt good.
Go watch Strictly ffs.
I would, but I sold the TV to make my last ever mortgage payment 😆
Dead, probably. The biggest downside of divorce.
Why do people feel compelled to tell other random strangers this piece of useless information?Does it matter? Everyones circumstances are different, if someone has a mortgage till their 100 so what, that on its own is meaningless.
A useful gauge of whether you're being sensible/reckless? Plenty good enough reason to ask.
I was only 12 when I rocked up with a wheelbarrow full of cash and made the owner of my country estate a ridiculously high offer to move out on the spot.
Do I win a prize?
A useful gauge of whether you're being sensible/reckless?
I dunno, but I did buy a new bike today so I is happy!!
😆
Do I win a prize?
Yes. But it might not be the one you were hoping for.
It is willy waving .
Ha.
Five years left one one and the other will be sold to buy a northern castle.
Or,we'll stay in the south ,skint! and spend all our cash on artesan bread and organic veg.
70, I think. Only £350,631.94 to go. Good job I'm a single earner on a zero hours contract doing labouring and only have four other mouths to feed.
Not my favourite topic, this.
39 now will be 63 when it’s paid off, plan to clear the odd bit of debt over next few years then start to over pay hoping to cut it back to 55, if not will take my lump sum from pension and use that, will def pay it before 55 one way or another.
A useful gauge of whether you're being sensible/reckless? Plenty good enough reason to ask.
Quite possibly, but perhaps not in the direction you think.
So to clarify, do you think the sensible person is the one who has paid off his mortgage by the age of 45 or the bloke on the first page who has a big fat mortgage, presumably at a ridiculously low interest rate, and is making 8%PA on his big huge pot of savings?
So to clarify, do you think the sensible person is the one who has paid off his mortgage by the age of 45 or the bloke on the first page who has a big fat mortgage, presumably at a ridiculously low interest rate, and is making 8%PA on his big huge pot of savings?
Depends whether you want/need a big house or not. No pockets in shrouds and all that.
Harmless enough thread. Made me think how lucky we are in the wider world picture, regardless of our mortgage balances.
What Mr sheen says
Tbh my plan is to treat it like a savings account mostly....
Overpay now while I work abroad in a wellpaying job(pays well because I work abroad in shit holes for weeks on end) and take payment holidays when needed/reduce my payment to suit the lesser paying job(as I don't want to be that father if I can possibly not be) I'll have once kids come along. ....
We just took on another mortgage to fund doing up our place. About 20 years to go, so 62 or so.
Sad to say, I think we might getting windfalls from dead parents sooner than that though so could be earlier.
50. 9 years ago.
It wasn't a huge sum so I easily paid it off with the huge lump sum I got as part of my early retirement package.
I'll bet my flat cost less outright than some on here pay in a year towards their mortgage. It's entirely possible to have no mortgage and a decent pot of savings. All about choices and what you want in life. Some are happy with a simple life and free time to enjoy it, others aren't happy unless they have all the trimmings. No need to compare yourself to anyone else if you are happy doing what you're doing.
Hopefully in a little over two years when I'm 55
No idea.
We were late onto the property ladder, finally buying 10 years ago exactly at the wrong time 🙁
I'm 42 at the moment and have £150k left on the original £250k mortgage.
Not sure how long that will take as the amount we can afford to overpay it varies. And realistically we'll move somewhere bigger before it is paid off anyway.
I was 40 when I paid mine off I think.
I bought my house in '92 though, a period when the housing market was in the doldrums, interest rates > 10% etc. My initial mortgage went though on Black Wednesday 😯
Suffice to say, house prices were a fraction of current prices.
I'm overpaying to clear it by 40. The plan is this is the forever house, so hopefully that'll be the last time. It'll double the amount of cash we have each month.
[quote=wrightyson ]**** paying off the mortgage. Mrs ws and I plus the kids now are partying hard still and paying off the mortgage as the contract requires. Bollox to overpaying and suffering now whilst we can still enjoy going out and doing/buying what we want when we want etc.
If you've looked at the figures and made your life decisions then fair play to you.
If you haven't then take two minutes to whack in your figures here and see what difference overpaying would make.
https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/mortgages/mortgage-overpayment-calculator
(It's not [i]quite[/i] so compelling while interest rates are at an historic low - but that won't last forever)
bought my house in '92 though, a period when the housing market was in the doldrums, interest rates > 10% etc
I remember those days. Our first house, bought in 1981 was £16,000. We sold it 7 years later for £64,000. Paid 70 grand for the current house and could've sold it when we moved in for 80 grand. It then dropped to under 60 in no time at all. As interest rates rose we were offered the option of increasing the payments or maintaining the current monthly payment and extending the term. It went out by about 3 years at one point but came down as interest rates fell.
Happy days. Mind you, I'd rather those times than try and get on the property ladder now. My daughter's plan for home ownership is to wait for mum and dad to die. Charming girl, but she has a point. I tell her she'd better pray that I die first, cos if Mrs Z goes first I'm selling up and drowning in coke and hoovers on the cash.
Paid our last one off when I was 33, a few weeks before the first bairn arrived. Then we bought a bigger house and should manage to pay it off by 46...juat being sensible and not getting max mortgages. Repayments are only 450 a month so we have an offset and chuck any extra in there to chip down the monthly repayments as we please.
We probably won't. Have two mortgages on the house as an older one was base rate + 0.5% for lifetime of mortgage and we kept it 😀 and started another. Currently interest only. Second mortage will be paid off by repayment and AVC pension pot (I have a final salary too) when I retire. We'll downsize/move somewhere cheaper, preferably by the coast. Clearly you do not live where I do - When we moved, our new house was double the old one.
42 now. Wil be 61 when it's paid off. BUT we could sell it tomorrow and buy somewhere smaller in a less desirable area and live mortgage free. Her indoors is a bit posh though and has frowned upon that idea.
Will be 63, 33 now. Mortgage is £650 a month which I struggle to
pay as only earner with two kids.
When wife goes back to work next year will be overpaying as much as possible as I can't stand debt.
