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Febgirl
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Joined: 10 August 2007
Points: 1033
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Posted: 17 November 2010 at 4:44pm |
Our new mortgage is around $370k which is pretty average for Auckland I would have thought?
Apparently a good rule of thumb is that you should be paying around 25% or 30% of your income on mortgage/rent - I'd say for a lot of people that is pretty impossible though!
Definitely go and see a mortgage broker or even better financial advisor - they will be able to give you the best advice and a wake up call for your BF if needed!
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Two little girls under 2!
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nuts_nats
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Joined: 20 August 2009
Points: 103
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Posted: 17 November 2010 at 8:53pm |
Totally agree with Febgirl about seeing a mortgage broker, they can help you look at different alternatives for getting a mortgage and will also apply to different banks which saves you alot of time! We got turned down by one bank and our broker was a life saver! The Welcome Home scheme as others have mentioned is an excellent idea to look into, they have increased the amount you can borrow in the Auckland region now too. Since its your first home you might have to look at living somewhere further out and cheaper for a few years just to get your foot in the door
Good luck!
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luvmylittlies
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Joined: 08 July 2009
Location: Auckland
Points: 4140
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Posted: 17 November 2010 at 9:39pm |
Some awesome advice - thanks ladies. I need to sit down with my BF and get him to understand all these things too. And yes, do a budget which might scare him a little. He's one of the damn reasons I have anxiety issues about money! Anyway, we definitely need to do some more work to see if we can afford it and still have some buffer for rate rises or big unexpected costs.
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Adoring Mum to Talisin 8/9/11 and Kiara 18/01/10
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AandCsmum
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Joined: 13 May 2008
Location: Palmerston North
Points: 8432
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Posted: 17 November 2010 at 9:45pm |
I'm so glad I don't live in Auckland LOL
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Kel
A = 01.02.04 & C = 16.01.09 & G = 30.03.12
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luvmylittlies
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Joined: 08 July 2009
Location: Auckland
Points: 4140
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Posted: 17 November 2010 at 10:12pm |
Yeah, it was the reason I moved from Sydney in the first place and now I'm in bloody Auckland where the prices are almost the same. Oh well. Maybe I have some rich but unknown relative who will die and leave me all their money.
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Adoring Mum to Talisin 8/9/11 and Kiara 18/01/10
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lilfatty
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Joined: 22 August 2007
Location: Waitakere
Points: 9799
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Posted: 18 November 2010 at 11:36am |
LOL - Unless I have some relatives I dont know about, I doubt im getting any money when anyone dies.
I just worked out our payments though and its under 25% of my income, so thats cool!
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Mummy to Issy (3) and Elias (18 months)
I did it .. 41 kgs gone! From flab to fab in under a year LFs weight blog
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xLUCKYx
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Joined: 30 September 2007
Location: Waitakere
Points: 2340
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Posted: 18 November 2010 at 12:48pm |
We owe 265k and pay $510 a week. We bought our house 3 years ago on a 90% mortgage over 17 years so we only have 14 years to go! When we eventually move up in the world and buy bigger and better I imagine we will go to a 25 year mortgage though but for now we are managing fine and are quite happy to be on our short(er) term mortgage.
Mortgage:
Origin:
late Middle English: from Old French, literally 'dead pledge', from mort (from Latin mortuus 'dead') + gage 'pledge'
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RachelBerry
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Joined: 13 November 2010
Points: 23
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Posted: 18 November 2010 at 1:06pm |
Our mortgage costs us nearly $1k a week - that's for a $490k loan. We have it split into a few different amounts, but most of it is on a 22 year term (some on a 5 year to pay it back faster). And we don't even live in one of the major cities!
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kiwikt
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Joined: 02 March 2010
Points: 631
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Posted: 18 November 2010 at 1:43pm |
It is amazing to hear what everyone is paying.
We are in a really similar boat to everyone else - $290k mortgage, paying $580 a week. This is over 14 years though. We could extend it and pay less.
I tell everyone who is looking to get a mortgage - figure out what you can afford to spend. 20-25% of your after tax income per week is a good guide (it is about what we spend) and then fit a loan around that.
And sometimes it is better to pay a larger amount on a smaller mortgage, than a smaller amount on a larger mortgage. Just think what the interest difference is between a 15 and 25 year mortgage!
I have friends who could have afforded to pay double what they were on their mortgage but they decided that they would rather have a crazy amount of disposable income. Now they have a family and cannot afford to pay more, they are in the poo because their house value has dropped and they have not been able to get as much equity in their recent sale.
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Due 14/10/11
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GuestGuest
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Joined: 21 April 2008
Points: 3600
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Posted: 18 November 2010 at 2:39pm |
We have a $250kish mortgage and we pay $2500 per month but we usually end up paying $3500 per month ($875 per week) on average because we have part of it on revolving credit. Our aim is to get it paid off as quickly as possible so we are pouring money into it before we have a baby.
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fire_engine
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Joined: 03 November 2007
Points: 6260
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Posted: 18 November 2010 at 3:06pm |
When we started looking, we were childless but planning to TTC a year later. We were amazed at what the banks would lend - up to $660K
We ended up with a $285K mortgage which we're knocking back - I think it's now an 8 year term? We're lucky that my PT job allowed us to maintain the same payments, though much more than 30% of our income goes into our mortgage. ETA - we had been paying back personal loans/student loans hard out for 2 years prior so were used to living on that amount)
It is depressing that the next place we buy (which will be more expensive as we need to be more central for our works) will probably mean we end up with a mortgage that's double our current one. I sometimes feel like a hamster on a wheel.
At one point we tossed up moving back South and it was waaaaaay too depressing seeing what we could get in Chch for what we would get in Auckland. We decided to stop looking and comparing.
Edited by Flissty
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Mum to two wee boys
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