How To Make Biweekly Mortgage Payments

Biweekly payments can save thousands and shave years off your mortgage

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Chances are that if you own a home, you’re making monthly mortgage payments. The typical mortgage is structured to make a single payment each month, for 12 payments per year. The good thing about this is it means you pay the same amount at the same time each month, so there are no surprises, and it’s easier to budget.

But what would happen if you were to split that monthly payment up and make biweekly payments instead? Surprisingly, you could save yourself tens of thousands of dollars in interest charges and achieve mortgage debt freedom sooner. Here’s how to make biweekly mortgage payments work for you.

Key Takeaways

  • A biweekly mortgage payment schedule makes a payment on your mortgage every two weeks instead of once a month.
  • You can use your current lender to switch to biweekly payments or create a schedule yourself.
  • Make sure you look for mortgage scams, and check with your lender to make sure it supports biweekly payments and credits you appropriately.

How Biweekly Payments Work

Generally speaking, the premise of making biweekly mortgage payments is simple. Instead of paying once a month, you pay half your monthly mortgage amount every other week.

The real magic of the biweekly payment comes from the fact that there are 52 weeks in a year, giving you 26 total payments. If you were to make two payments a month, that would be just 24 payments in a year. So, the biweekly method has you making two extra payments each year, which is the same as making one extra monthly payment.

For example, suppose your current monthly mortgage payment were $1,000. Over a year, you would spend $12,000, making 12 payments. If you were to make biweekly payments, you would make a $500 payment every two weeks. It seems like the same thing, right?

Note

The biweekly method drastically decreases the amount of interest you pay for your home.

If you take $500 and multiply it by 26 payments, you have $13,000 in total payments. That extra $1,000 is applied directly to your principal, reducing how much you’ll spend on interest and helping you to pay your mortgage off sooner.

Here's another example to help you better understand the true savings. Assuming a $100,000 30-year mortgage at a fixed interest rate of 6.5%, you'll pay $127,544 in interest, plus the $100,000 principal, for a total of $227,544. Paying half of your regular monthly mortgage payment every two weeks will result in an interest cost of $97,215, saving you $30,329.

The larger your mortgage and interest rate are, the greater your long-run savings will be using this payment method.

How To Make Biweekly Payments Through Your Lender

In many cases, switching to biweekly payments is as simple as asking your lender to alter your current payment plan. However, it's important to get the timing right if you're already enrolled in automatic drafts for your payments.

If you switch to biweekly payments in the middle of the month after making your regular mortgage payment, you'll need to schedule your first biweekly payment for the beginning of the next month. Otherwise, you'd be making one and a half payments in the same month, which could strain your budget.

Note

To calculate a mortgage, you need a few details about the loan. You can then complete the calculations by hand or use this mortgage calculator to crunch the numbers.

When switching to biweekly payments with your lender, ask how your payments will be credited. Specifically, you need to know whether the extra payment that results from making biweekly payments will automatically be applied to the principal.

You also must make sure your lender will immediately credit each biweekly payment upon receipt. If your lender waits until the second payment has been received before crediting your loan, you'll never see the financial benefits of biweekly payments.

How To Make Biweekly Payments Yourself

If your lender doesn't offer a biweekly payment option, you can create one for yourself. It's relatively simple to do: Divide your monthly mortgage payment by 12, and make one principal-only extra mortgage payment for the resulting amount each month.

You'd technically still be making your regular mortgage payment, plus one smaller extra payment, but the cumulative effect would be the same as if you were making biweekly payments automatically.

Note

You can also make extra payments as you come into additional funds, such as a tax refund.

You could also achieve the same results by making one single extra monthly payment once each year. In that case, it would be considered a lump-sum mortgage payment, but it could still bring your principal balance down.

Things To Watch Out For

Making biweekly payments is a handy tool, but be careful of scams or special programs that claim they can do this for you. Some companies offer to convert your monthly mortgage payment into biweekly payments for a one-time fee. Avoid those offers. It shouldn’t cost you anything to make extra payments on your loan.

Make sure that making biweekly payments fits your budget. If you're typically paid once per month, you might be used to paying all of your bills at once instead of spreading them out. If you're paid weekly, make sure you're holding enough cash in reserve each week to make your next biweekly payment once it comes due.

Check that you're signing up for a true biweekly mortgage schedule, not a bimonthly mortgage. That schedule involves two payments per month, but doesn't offer the advantage of the extra payment each year.

Finally, make sure there isn’t a penalty for prepaying your mortgage. Most mortgages these days do not have a prepayment penalty, but there are still some out there that will penalize you for trying to pay off your mortgage early. Just be sure that you won’t be doing more harm than good by making extra biweekly payments.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What happens to your 30-year mortgage if you make biweekly payments?

If you make biweekly payments for the entire life of your 30-year mortgage, you'll pay it off more than four years earlier and save significant amounts of interest.

How smart are biweekly payment plans?

A biweekly plan will save you a lot of interest over the life of your loan, but it's only a smart move if the extra payments work for you. You're essentially paying the equivalent of one additional mortgage payment each year, so you should be sure you can budget for that. It's also smart to compare your interest savings to what you could potentially earn by investing that extra payment instead.

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