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Using a Mortgage Accelerator to Pay Off Your Mortgage in 10 Years

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Written by Igor Buces   
Monday, 08 September 2008 15:04
Given the present economical conditions, we have to find creative and proved ways to maximize how we use our money. In order to do so, we need to change how we look at money, and how we can shift our habits to use every dollar we make to our advantage.
by IgorBuces


Given the present economical conditions, we have to find creative and proved ways to maximize how we use our money. In order to do so, we need to change how we look at money, and how we can shift our habits to use every dollar we make to our advantage.

For instances, many of us are ok with getting very little return on our money by having it sit in a checking or saving account with very little return. By doing this, the bank is the one making use of our money and getting richer in the process.

Another common example is a mortgage. With a traditional 30 year mortgage, it takes 20 years and 2 months to come to the point where the portion that we pay toward the principal equals the portion we pay toward the interest.

Since most American only lives in their homes between 5 and 7 years, we barely decrease the principal in our mortgage. This is so because the way the mortgage is structured heavily favors the banks since at the beginning most of the money goes to pay the interest portion.

For over 20 years, homeowners in Australia, the U.K. and Canada have used mortgage accelerator programs to pay off their mortgages in less than 15 years saving an average of $150,000 on their home mortgages. The good news is that this type of programs is now available to homeowners in the U.S.

A mortgage accelerator program works without making additional payments toward the mortgage. It works in 4 simple steps:

1. At the beginning of each month, a software tells you the right amount to pay toward your first mortgage to make sure you are paying as little interest as possible. The funds for this payment come from an advance line of credit (HELOC.) By doing so, the debt in your mortgage is reduced an you move further down the amortization schedule.

2. You deposit your income in the HELOC reducing the balance on the HELOC. By doing so, you have your money working against your debt in the HELOC.

3. You charge your daily expenses on one credit card to allow your money to sit in the HELOC for as long as possible.

4. At the end of the month, you pay the credit card off before incurring any interest charges from the credit card company.

By doing a few changes in your financial habits, you can start making the bank's money work for you and no the other way around. Using other people's money (the bank's money) is one of the surest and fastest ways to become financially independent.

Although it make take a while to get use to the changes, you can think of the other alternative; After all, how much effort and time would it take you to make the money you would save if you could pay off your home mortgage in 10 years?

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