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Home sweet home

Majthenyi notes that if you're working with the same lender, there's often no penalty involved with increasing your mortgage before the term expires.

The Stewarts seem like prime candidates. They have a $200,000 mortgage on a house worth about $425,000. They have plenty of equity, they're up for renewal at the end of the year and they say they're serious about getting their finances in order. Ideally, they'd roll the debt into their mortgage, continue an accelerated payment program whereby they pay every two weeks and they would not increase their amortization period, but instead increase their payments.

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Dealing with debt
It's a good plan, says Campbell, who thinks all mortgage holders should accelerate their payments. She also likes the idea that they plan to stick to a 17-year amortization instead of renegotiating another 25-year mortgage. However, she stresses that none of this amounts to much if the Stewarts are going to continue the same spending habits and find themselves in a similar position five years from now. "They have to understand what got them into this $40,000 debt in the first place. They have to make sure they don't fall victim to that again."

She recommends cutting up credit cards, especially store cards, which have higher rates of interest, and not using one's line of credit like a bank account.

(continued on next page)
-- Posted: Oct. 15, 2008
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