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To consolidate mortgages or not

Dear Dr. Don,
I currently own two homes and have two mortgage payments. I have a payment of around $980 for the primary residence and $1,200 on the second home. On the primary residence I owe about $58,000 and on the second home $104,000.

My question is, should I consolidate the two mortgages into one and just have one payment or get a home equity loan and pay off the primary home? Please note that my primary home is in Maryland and the second home is in Florida. What do you think is my best option to pay off my primary home and just have one mortgage? My interest rate on both mortgages is 5.8 percent.
-- Mike Mortgages

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Dear Mike,
I think restructuring your mortgage debt to have just one monthly payment isn't a reason to refinance. A home equity loan or home equity line of credit, HELOC, will have fairly low closing costs, but interest rates have backed up enough on these loans that you will be refinancing at a higher interest rate. The variable rate on a HELOC will continue to go higher every time the Federal Reserve Board raises its interest rate target for Federal Funds. The current national average for a HELOC and a home equity loan are 6.86 percent and 7.21 percent respectively. The national average for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage is 6.07 percent.

Refinancing makes sense when you can get a lower interest rate or if you need to extend the term of the loan. Assuming both these loans are fixed-rate loans at 5.8 percent, you're not likely to improve much, if any, on the interest rate. You didn't mention the remaining loan terms on the two properties, but it's likely that you could refinance with a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage and reduce your monthly payment quite a bit. The downside to that of course is the additional interest expense you will pay by extending to 30 years. The amortization schedule provided with Bankrate's mortgage calculator will calculate the interest expense on your current and prospective loans.

Automatic payments via direct debit can make paying the monthly mortgage payment a snap and avoid the time and expense of mailing a check. Talk to your lender about which automatic payment plans they offer.

If you decide to go ahead anyway, review IRS Publication 536, Home Mortgage Interest Deduction, or talk to your tax adviser about being able to use the mortgage interest expense on the new mortgage to generate a deduction on your income taxes.

Bankrate.com's corrections policy
-- Posted: Oct. 13, 2005
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Home Equity
Compare today's rates
NATIONAL OVERNIGHT AVERAGES
$30K HELOC 5.24%
$50K HELOC 4.99%
$30K Home equity loan 8.35%
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